2006
DOI: 10.1353/mfs.2006.0022
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The Scopic Drive and Visual Projection in Heart of Darkness

Abstract: Using Jacques Lacan's arguments about the gaze, this essay examines the dialectic of looking and being looked at that runs through Marlow's tale in Heart of Darkness. The scenes of looking often contain ideological symptoms of colonialist voyeurism, in their repeated emphasis on intrusive and yet thwarted vision. The scenes of being looked at frequently produce sensations of "scotomization": a term I borrow from Lacan to describe experiences when the human subject feels reduced, imagines himself as insignifica… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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