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روانزخم و پیامدهای آن با تاکید بر دیدگاه اسلاوی ژیژک
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نویسنده
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موسوی نیا رحیم ,دهاقانی مهسا ,لویمی مطلق کریم
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منبع
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نقد و نظريه ادبي - 1399 - دوره : 5 - شماره : 2 - صفحه:231 -276
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چکیده
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هدف تحقیق حاضر بررسی و تحلیل مفهوم روانزخم و پیامدهای آن از منظر اسلاوی ژیژک است. ژیژک معتقد است که روانزخم ناشی از ورود نابهنگام امر واقع به امر نمادین است و در ساختار کُنش به تعویق افتاده معنا مییابد. افراد مختلف واکنشهای متفاوتی نسبت به روانزخم نشان میدهند. به زعم لاکاپرا واکنشها به روانزخم در دو دسته کلی قرار میگیرند؛ برونریزی و درونیسازی. فرایند برونریزی با نشانههای ترومایی از جمله اختلالهای انگیختگی، تحمیل یا محدودیت همراه است. ولی در فرایند درونیسازی سوژه با فقدان ناشی از رویداد آسیبزا کنار میآید و به سوگواری میپردازد. در پیوستار واکنشهای گوناگون به روانزخم، ژیژک مدعی است که روانزخم در نهایت به تولد یک سوژه جدید موسوم به سوژه پساترومایی میانجامد. بارزترین پیامد تجربه یک رویداد آسیبزا این است که بحران بیرونی به تجربه یک بحران درونی منجر میشود، چراکه روانزخم ماهیتی پسنگر دارد و کارکرد موفقیتآمیز زنجیره دلالت را تضعیف میکند. روانزخم به صورت یک اختلال و همراه با نشانههایی نمایان میشود که هویت سوژه را تحت تاثیر قرار میدهد و او را رها نمیکند
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کلیدواژه
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روانزخم، نشانهها، پیامدها، ژیژک
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آدرس
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دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز, دانشکده ادبیات و علوم انسانی, ایران, دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز, ایران, دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز, ایران
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Trauma and Its Consequences: A Žižekian Perspective
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Authors
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Moosavinia Sayyed Rahim ,Dehaghani Mahsa ,Lowaymi Mutlaq Kareem
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Abstract
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This study aims to investigate and analyze the consequences of trauma through the lens provided by Slavoj Žižek. He believes that the unexpected intrusion of the Real into the Symbolic order is called trauma, which gains meaning only in retrospect. Different subjects respond differently to a trauma. According to LaCapra, the usual responses of subjects to trauma are “acting out” and “working through”. The process of “acting out” contains traumatic symptoms including arousal, intrusion and constriction. But by “working through”, the subject tries to come to terms with the traumatic experience and the related loss through mourning. Žižek contends that the continuum of various reactions to trauma ends with the birth of a new subject known as the posttraumatic subject. The prominent consequence of indirect experience of a traumatic event is that an external crisis leads to an internal one, since trauma operates retroactively and attenuates the successful functioning of signification. Therefore, trauma becomes a disorder which entails traumatic symptoms that affect identity and meaning. Extended Abstract 1. Introduction Traumas occur as a result of direct or indirect encounters with unexpected traumatic events. The symptoms of a trauma appear after such an encounter. Such an experience leads to different individual and social consequences. Reactions to a trauma are regarded as a continuum. Immediate reactions such as flight and freeze can be located at one pole of this continuum and posttraumatic disorders and the birth of a new subject at the other pole. The survivors/victims of a trauma suffer from the traumatic event and are devastated by its remembrance. They carry the memory of the traumatic event in their mind, and experiencing it again or trying to avoid remembering it is painful to them. 2. Theoretical Framework Žižek believes that trauma results from the unexpected intrusion of the real into the symbolic and gains meaning in the structure of the deferred action. Different people show different reactions to trauma. LaCapra maintains that reactions to trauma can be divided into “acting out” and “working through”. Žižek holds that in the continuum of different reactions to trauma, it eventually results in the birth of a new subject called posttraumatic subject. 3. Methodology The symptoms of trauma and its consequences have been psychoanalytically examined in the present study. The consequences of a trauma are the individual and social effects of experiencing a traumatic event on the subject. In this study, first the concept of trauma and its definitions by Freud, Lacan and Žižek are studied and then the “acting out” and “working through” reactions and symptoms of struggling with trauma and the posttraumatic subject are introduced. 4. Findings Traumas work retroactively and appear as disorders with symptoms that affect the identity of the subject and attenuate the functioning of signification. If the disorder resulting from the trauma worsens, its symptoms appear as disruption in cognition and identity. The traumatic event changes the subject’s perception of the self, others and the world. The subject gradually develops a feeling of inefficiency and uselessness, loses its integrity and turns into a new subject with no emotional participation or enthusiasm, completely unfamiliar with their previous identity. 5. Conclusion The main components of trauma studies are constantly changing and redefined, as a result of which numerous patterns and models have been developed to represent the concept of trauma, its symptoms and its consequences. In the present study, by relying on the ideas of the contemporary philosopher Slavoj Žižek, one of the important psychoanalytical models of trauma, and its symptoms and consequences were analyzed. It is concluded that following a traumatic event, individuals undergo an internal transformation. In other words, an external crisis turns into an internal crisis. From a psychoanalytical perspective, due to the direct or indirect experience of a sad event, these subjects suffer a kind of internal crisis, which can be for two reasons: first, because of the retroactive nature of trauma, and second, due to the attenuation of signification. Select BibliographyBerger, J. 2004. “Trauma without Disability, Disability without Trauma: A Disciplinary Divide.” JAC 24: 563582.Bistoen, G. Craps, S. & Vanheule, S. 2014. “Nachträglichkeit: A Freudian Perspective on Delayed Traumatic Reactions.” Theory & Psychology 24/5: 66887.Caruth, C. 1996. Unclaimed Experience: Trauma, Narrative, and History. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University.Herman, J. 1992. Trauma and Recovery. New York: Basic Books.LaCapra, D. 2001. Writing History, Writing Trauma. New York: The Johns Hopkins University Press.Luckhurst, R. 2008. The Trauma Question. London and New York: Routledge.McFarlane, A., B. Van der Kolk. 1996. “The Black Hole of Trauma.” In: Van der Kolk et al. (eds.). Traumatic Stress: The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society. New York: The Guilford.Žižek, S. 1989. The Sublime Object of Ideology. New York: Verso.Žižek, S. 1994. The Metastasis of Enjoyment: Six Essays on Woman and Causality. New York: Verso.Žižek, S. 2008. “Descartes and the Posttraumatic Subject”. Filozofski Vestnik 24/2: 929.
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Keywords
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