Playing with freud: radical narcissism and intertextuality in frame's intensive care and daughter buffalo

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Date
2009
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Rodopi B.V. Amsterdam-New York
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Abstract
In this essay, my aim is to place Frame and Freud in an interpretative relationship by pursung just one point of intersection between them: the modulations of the Narcissus myth in Intensive Care and Daughter Buffalo, focusing on scenes that concentrate the dilemmas of transference, "desperate capture," and misapprehended love descsribed so acutely in Frame's autobiography.
Description
This paper is the final draft for an article that has now been published. It appears on the author’s webpage by permission of Editions Rodopi. Please be aware that the published version of the paper contains some minor corrections to this final draft. The full citation for the published version of this paper is: Lawn, Jennifer. “Playing with Freud: Radical Narcissism and Intertextuality in Frame’s Intensive Care and Daughter Buffalo.” Frameworks: Contemporary Criticism on Janet Frame. Ed. Jan Cronin and Simone Drichel. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2009. 25-47. Link to book on publisher's website: http://www.rodopi.nl/functions/search.asp?BookId=CC+110
Keywords
Autobiography, John Money, Queer theory, Narcissus
Citation
Lawn, J. (2009). Playing with Freud: Radical narcissism and intertextuality in Frame’s Intensive Care and Daughter Buffalo. In J. Cronin and S. Drichel (Eds.), Frameworks: Contemporary Criticism on Janet Frame (pp. 25-47). Amsterdam: Rodopi Press.
Lawn, J. (2009). Playing with Freud: Radical narcissism and intertextuality in Frame’s Intensive Care and Daughter Buffalo. In J. Cronin and S. Drichel (Eds.), Frameworks: Contemporary Criticism on Janet Frame (pp. 25-47). Amsterdam: Rodopi Press.
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