Understanding Lacan, Understanding Modernism
By (Author) Dr. Thomas Waller
Edited by Dr Sinan Richards
Series edited by Dr. Laci Mattison
Series edited by Paul Ardoin
Series edited by Professor S. E. Gontarski
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
2nd October 2025
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary theory
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Structuralism and Post-structuralism
Hardback
256
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Presents the most wide-ranging and in-depth exploration of the influence of modernist art and literature on Jacques Lacan, emphasizing the valences of Lacanian psychoanalysis for interpretations of modernism.
A notorious presence in French intellectual circles throughout the 20th century, Lacan was himself personal friends with modernists such as Andr Breton and Salvador Dal, and in 1923 was present at the legendary reading of Ulysses at the Shakespeare and Company bookshop by James Joyce, to whom Lacan would devote a year of his seminar in 1975-76. Lacan himself contributed to several Surrealist publications, including the famous magazine Minotaure, the inaugural edition of which featured special mention of Lacans early work on psychosis. However, despite this affinity with early 20th-century modernism, Lacans name is still more routinely associated with the category of so-called "postmodernism," thus rendering the question of style and periodization somewhat out of focus.
Understanding Lacan, Understanding Modernism asks and responds to a series of questions, including: Is Lacan a modernist or a postmodernist, and what is the difference How significant was the influence of modernist literature and art on the development of Lacans ideas
The final section identifies key Lacaninan concepts and terms, offering context and a discussion of their usage and relevance in current thought.
Thomas Waller is a Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Fellow at University College Dublin, Ireland. He has published widely in journals such as Textual Practice, Rethinking Marxism, Modern Fiction Studies, and Qui Parle. His monograph Genres of Transition: Literature and Economy in Portuguese-Speaking Southern Africa is forthcoming in 2024. He is an Associate Editor at CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture.
Sinan Richards is a British Academy Research Fellow at King's College London. He is the author of Dialectics of Love in Sartre and Lacan (2024), as well as various articles on the history and philosophy of Lacanian psychoanalysis. His next book, entitled Homo Alienatus: Lacan and Fanon on Freedom and Psychosis is forthcoming.