Psychoanalytic Criticism
Psychoanalytic Criticism
Psychoanalytic Criticism
Psychoanalytic Criticism
about some shady dealing. At any rate, dreams are enough to demonstrate that the
unconscious has the admirable resourcefulness of a lazy, ill-supplied chef, who
slings together the most diverse ingredients into a cobbled together stew,
substituting one spice for another which he is out of, making do with whatever has
arrived in the market that morning as a dream will draw opportunistically on the
'day's residues', mixing in events which took place during the day or sensations felt
during sleep with images drawn deep from our childhood.8
It follows that, according to Lacan, human language works by the lack of
desire: the absence of the real objects which signs designate, the fact that words
have meaning only by virtue of the absence and exclusion of others. To enter
language, then, is to become a prey to desire: language is what hollows being into
desire. Language divides up, articulates, the fullness of the imaginary: we will
now never be able to find rest in the single object, the final meaning, which will
make sense of all the others. To enter language is to be severed from what Lacan
calls the 'real', that inaccessible realm which is always beyond the reach of
signification, always outside the symbolic order. In particular, we are severed from
the mother's body: after the Oedipus crisis, we will never again be able to attain
this precious object, even though we will spend all of our lives hunting for it. We
have to make do instead with substitute objects, with which we try vainly to fill in
the gap at the very center of our being. We move among substitutes for substitutes,
metaphors of metaphors, never be able to recover the pure self-identity and self-
completion which we knew in the imaginary. There is no transcendental meaning
or object which will ground this endless yearning.9
However, Ronald Granofsky, commenting on D. H. Lawrence's fictions, cites
Ruderman that the pre-oedipal relationship is more important to an understanding
of Lawrence's works than the heterosexual, genital love relationship for which they
are commonly known."10
The poetry of Lawrence, however, can equally be interpreted in of his pre-
oedipal relationship. Lawrence was firmly attached to his mother. Therefore,
4
Lawrence's "Sorrow" shows his getting rid of this sick relationship, after the death
of his mother. This poem opens with a question in which the poet makes an
implicit comparison between the movement of the grey strands of smoke and the
process of his mother's passing away. Lawrence wonders why the smoke of his
cigarette agitates him:
In the next stanza, Lawrence answers his own question through revealing that
it is the death of his mother, which the poet compares to a thief that walks in
stealth, that makes him fall in deep sorrow:
In the last stanza, however, Lawrence shows that his pleasure, his "gaiety,"
has come to an end by the death of his mother. This gaiety ends as the "few long
grey hairs" of his mother move from "the breast" of his coat to "the dark chimney."
However, these grey hairs are reluctant in their movement. That is, they move one
by one, and slowly floating to the chimney:
Notes
1
Bijay Kumar Das, Twentieth Century Literary Criticism (New Delhi:
Atlantic Publishers and Distributors Ltd., 2005), 105.
2
Khursheed Ahmad Qazi (2011), "Lacanian concepts – Their Relevance to
Literary Analysis and Interpretation: A Post Structural Reading," The Criterion:
An International Journal in English Vol. 2 Issue 4 (December 2011), www.the-
criterion.com (accessed April 16th, 2013).
3
Ibid.
4
Raman Selden, Practicing Theory and Reading Literature: An Introduction
(Hertfordshire: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1989), 83.
5
Qazi
6
Terry Eagleton, Literary Theory: An Introduction (London: Blackwell
Publishing, 1996), 136.
7
Ibid.: 136.
8
Ibid.: 137.
9
Ibid.: 156.
10
Ronald Granofsky, D. H. Lawrence and Survival: Darinsim in the Fiction
of the Transitional Period (Quebec: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2003), 37.