‘Jacques Lacan and the Emerging Society of Enjoyment’ released

Literary criticism book ‘The End of Dissatisfaction? Jacques Lacan and the Emerging Society of Enjoyment’ (2004) by American scholar Todd McGowan who works on Hegel, psychoanalysis, existentialism, and cinema has been published in Persian.

The book which explains why the American cultural obsession with enjoying ourselves actually makes it more difficult to do so has been translated into Persian by Amir-Ali Mohammadi and Nazanin Shahbazi. Tehran-based Qoqnoos Publishing has released ‘Jacques Lacan and the Emerging Society of Enjoyment’ in 404 pages and 110 copies.

Exploring the emergence of a societal imperative to enjoy ourselves, Todd McGowan builds on the work of such theorists as Jacques Lacan, Slavoj Žižek, Joan Copjec, and Theresa Brennan to argue that we are in the midst of a large-scale transformation—a shift from a society oriented around prohibition (i.e., the notion that one cannot just do as one pleases) to one oriented around enjoyment.

McGowan identifies many of the social ills of American culture today as symptoms of this transformation: the sense of disconnection, the increase in aggression and violence, widespread cynicism, political apathy, incivility, and loss of meaning.

Discussing these various symptoms, he examines various texts from film, literature, popular culture, and everyday life, including Toni Morrison’s Paradise, Tony Kushner’s Angels in America, and such films as Dead Poets Society and Trigger Effect. Paradoxically, ‘The End of Dissatisfaction?’ shows how the American cultural obsession with enjoying ourselves actually makes it more difficult to do so.

Todd McGowan is Professor of English at the University of Vermont, USA. He is the author of 15 books, including ‘Universality and Identity Politics’ (2020), ‘Emancipation After Hegel’ (2019), and ‘Capitalism and Desire’ (2016).

He is the series editor of Film Theory in Practice (Bloomsbury), and co-series editor (with Slavoj Žižek and Adrian Johnston) of Diaeresis (Northwestern University Press). He is also the host of the podcast Why Theory (with Ryan Engley).

Source: IBNA

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