Dramatic Jouissance in Edward Bond’s Born

Edward Bond’s 2006 play Born is set in a police state, and is haunted by recurrent rattling sounds. The article suggests that these disturbances to audio visual synchrony may be used to stage Lacan’s ‘fluid’ relationship between signifier and signified, allowing audiences to encounter “radical point...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kate KATAFIASZ
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2014-12-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/erea/3991
id doaj-26767a16687d45b3957cb4e9cc60e055
record_format Article
spelling doaj-26767a16687d45b3957cb4e9cc60e0552020-11-24T21:43:39ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182014-12-011210.4000/erea.3991Dramatic Jouissance in Edward Bond’s BornKate KATAFIASZEdward Bond’s 2006 play Born is set in a police state, and is haunted by recurrent rattling sounds. The article suggests that these disturbances to audio visual synchrony may be used to stage Lacan’s ‘fluid’ relationship between signifier and signified, allowing audiences to encounter “radical points in the real” characterised by souffrance – a painful suspense, where reality is “awaiting attention” (Seminar XI 55, 56). Here, the relationship between perception and consciousness may be stretched, ruptured, and reversed, to produce extraordinarily different states of awareness. The article investigates how they are reversed in Bond’s police state, inverting symbolic relationships so that the signifier does not represent physicality as we might suppose; instead physicality unwittingly endorses the signifier, which entraps and commands it in various ways. The article argues that comedy and tragedy are fundamentally democratic tropes because they correct this authoritarian inversion; comic jouissance emerging when physicality subverts the signifier; tragic jouissance disrupting the entire symbolic order with its uncompromising prioritisation of corporeality.http://journals.openedition.org/erea/3991realjouissancesouffrancecomedytragedy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kate KATAFIASZ
spellingShingle Kate KATAFIASZ
Dramatic Jouissance in Edward Bond’s Born
E-REA
real
jouissance
souffrance
comedy
tragedy
author_facet Kate KATAFIASZ
author_sort Kate KATAFIASZ
title Dramatic Jouissance in Edward Bond’s Born
title_short Dramatic Jouissance in Edward Bond’s Born
title_full Dramatic Jouissance in Edward Bond’s Born
title_fullStr Dramatic Jouissance in Edward Bond’s Born
title_full_unstemmed Dramatic Jouissance in Edward Bond’s Born
title_sort dramatic jouissance in edward bond’s born
publisher Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)
series E-REA
issn 1638-1718
publishDate 2014-12-01
description Edward Bond’s 2006 play Born is set in a police state, and is haunted by recurrent rattling sounds. The article suggests that these disturbances to audio visual synchrony may be used to stage Lacan’s ‘fluid’ relationship between signifier and signified, allowing audiences to encounter “radical points in the real” characterised by souffrance – a painful suspense, where reality is “awaiting attention” (Seminar XI 55, 56). Here, the relationship between perception and consciousness may be stretched, ruptured, and reversed, to produce extraordinarily different states of awareness. The article investigates how they are reversed in Bond’s police state, inverting symbolic relationships so that the signifier does not represent physicality as we might suppose; instead physicality unwittingly endorses the signifier, which entraps and commands it in various ways. The article argues that comedy and tragedy are fundamentally democratic tropes because they correct this authoritarian inversion; comic jouissance emerging when physicality subverts the signifier; tragic jouissance disrupting the entire symbolic order with its uncompromising prioritisation of corporeality.
topic real
jouissance
souffrance
comedy
tragedy
url http://journals.openedition.org/erea/3991
work_keys_str_mv AT katekatafiasz dramaticjouissanceinedwardbondsborn
_version_ 1725912788332707840