Jouissance of the Joyce Word
Reading Joyce’s Finnegans Wake is an encounter with singularity, a vicariously bruising encounter, blessedly joyful, often surprising and yet sometimes, when the
Reading Joyce’s Finnegans Wake is an encounter with singularity, a vicariously bruising encounter, blessedly joyful, often surprising and yet sometimes, when the
Since Freud, psychoanalysis has interested itself in writing, in order to teach us about the most intimate and most strange. When literary
Robinson by Laurent Demoulin1 presents us with a version of paternity that is poetically written - paternity is above all a function
“My way” is the title of the PIPOL8 Blog – where texts attest to a clinic outside norms. Say no more, we
[Write only what is worthwhile with regard to the most intimate experience] Marcel Cohen[1] is a writer who formulates what he names as
In 1949 in his famous novel “1984,” George Orwell imagined a totalitarian state called ‘Oceania,’ with a ministry of truth and a
The master is so enamoured with all languages, especially our very own [Belgian French] that he seeks to reduplicate himself. In effect,