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The Political Unconscious

By Paul H Fry - Yale
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Lecture Description

In this lecture, Professor Paul Fry explores Fredric Jameson's seminal work, The Political Unconscious, as an outcropping of Marxist literary criticism and structural theory. Texts such as Shelley's "Ode to the West Wind" and Shakespeare's seventy-third sonnet are examined in the context of Jameson's three horizons of underlying interpretive frameworks--the political, the social, and the historical, each carefully explained. The extent to which those frameworks permeate individual thought is addressed in a discussion of Jameson's concept of the "ideologeme." The theorist's work is juxtaposed with the writings of Bakhtin and Levi-Strauss. The lecture concludes by revisiting the children's story Tony the Tow Truck, upon which Jameson's theory of literature is mapped.

Course Description

Related Resources

A Bit More Marx and Marxism

Course Index

  1. Introduction to Literary Theory
  2. Introduction to Literary Theory (cont.)
  3. Ways In and Out of the Hermeneutic Circle
  4. Configurative Reading
  5. The Idea of the Autonomous Artwork
  6. The New Criticism and Other Western Formalisms
  7. Russian Formalism
  8. Semiotics and Structuralism
  9. Linguistics and Literature
  10. Deconstruction I
  11. Deconstruction II
  12. Freud and Fiction
  13. Jacques Lacan in Theory
  14. The Postmodern Psyche
  15. The Social Permeability of Reader and Text
  16. The Frankfurt School of Critical Theory
  17. The Political Unconscious
  18. The New Historicism
  19. The Classical Feminist Tradition
  20. African-American Criticism
  21. Post-Colonial Criticism
  22. Queer Theory and Gender Performativity
  23. The Institutional Construction of Literary Study
  24. Neo-Pragmatism
  25. Reflections