2015
DOI: 10.17576/3l-2015-2102-02
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The Baby’s Not for Burning: The Abject in Sarah Kane’s Blasted and Helen Oyeyemi’s Juniper’s Whitening

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…By analysing the work through Lacan's and Kristeva's psychoanalytical theories, Ali concludes that the persona is an abject lover with narcissistic and egoistical qualities who is more concerned about himself rather than the lady he is wooing. Lastly, a study by Satkunananthan (2015), interrogates the ways in which instances of infanticide and domestic violence in theatre plays unearth issues related to social unrest and phobias in a multicultural, twenty-first century Britain. These abject scenes of brutality are examined closely through Kristeva's psychoanalytical lens.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By analysing the work through Lacan's and Kristeva's psychoanalytical theories, Ali concludes that the persona is an abject lover with narcissistic and egoistical qualities who is more concerned about himself rather than the lady he is wooing. Lastly, a study by Satkunananthan (2015), interrogates the ways in which instances of infanticide and domestic violence in theatre plays unearth issues related to social unrest and phobias in a multicultural, twenty-first century Britain. These abject scenes of brutality are examined closely through Kristeva's psychoanalytical lens.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%