

This is the course blog for ENG L371 (Fall 2008).
DOUBLE
OED’s definition:
b. A counterpart; an image, or exact copy (of a thing or person). c. spec. The apparition of a living person; a wraith, fetch.
The word double in Lacan’s Ecrits is the word that helps the reader wrap his head Lacan’s theory and around the ideas of the Gestalt principle, the id, the ego, and the mirror. In his essay, Lacan tries to explain to his reader the process of a person’s understanding of his own existence. What’s interesting about the OED’s definition is that it’s first attempt to explain the double is to compare it to the word counterpart. In this case, our counterpart is our mirror-image. Lacan goes on to explain to the reader the significance of identification. This identification can be found through the mirror stage---seeing one’s double---and then advancing to the revelation of the “relation between the organism and its reality (4). I found it interesting that the human infant can become conscious of his existence through the image of his double in a mirror; therefore, we have a greater understanding and a greater “autonomy than animal knowledge” (3). With this comparison, it is essential to the reader that he understands the significance of a reflection. My dog still barks at herself when she sees her double in the reflection of our glass sliding door; I, on the other hand, don’t get scared with I see my double because I have an understanding of my reality and my existence, or as much as I can thus far.
ttp://bert.lib.indiana.edu:2055/cgi/entry/50068959?query_type=word&queryword=double&first=1&max_to_show=10&sort_type=alpha&result_place=1&search_id=GuOY-xXzhUT-18865&hilite=50068959
DOUBLE
OED’s definition:
b. A counterpart; an image, or exact copy (of a thing or person). c. spec. The apparition of a living person; a wraith, fetch.
The word double in Lacan’s Ecrits is the word that helps the reader wrap his head Lacan’s theory and around the ideas of the Gestalt principle, the id, the ego, and the mirror. In his essay, Lacan tries to explain to his reader the process of a person’s understanding of his own existence. What’s interesting about the OED’s definition is that it’s first attempt to explain the double is to compare it to the word counterpart. In this case, our counterpart is our mirror-image. Lacan goes on to explain to the reader the significance of identification. This identification can be found through the mirror stage---seeing one’s double---and then advancing to the revelation of the “relation between the organism and its reality (4). I found it interesting that the human infant can become conscious of his existence through the image of his double in a mirror; therefore, we have a greater understanding and a greater “autonomy than animal knowledge” (3). With this comparison, it is essential to the reader that he understands the significance of a reflection. My dog still barks at herself when she sees her double in the reflection of our glass sliding door; I, on the other hand, don’t get scared with I see my double because I have an understanding of my reality and my existence, or as much as I can thus far.
1. | pertaining to a sense of the beautiful or to the science of aesthetics. |
2. | having a sense of the beautiful; characterized by a love of beauty. |
3. | pertaining to, involving, or concerned with pure emotion and sensation as opposed to pure intellectuality. |
4. | a philosophical theory or idea of what is aesthetically valid at a given time and place: the clean lines, bare surfaces, and sense of space that bespeak the machine-age aesthetic. |
6. |
Archaic. the study of the nature of sensation. I think that Freud wants us to think of aesthetic as a way for analyzing Fear and Dread instead of art and beauty. They are pretty much opposites. He uses the rest of his essay to explain what the aesthetics are of fear and dread and that part of our psyches we use to analyze those two feelings. |
What Freud does in “The Uncanny” is try to define the unnatural things that creep into our affecting impulses. He notes the previous study of common aesthetics as purely concerned with positive emotions. Through his comparison of the definitions of German words Heimlich and Unheimlich, and analysis of “The Sandman” in which he thinks the uncanny is used as a literary device, Freud persuades the reader into the unknown territory of the eerie. “[T]he uncanny would always be an area in which a person was unsure of his way around” (Freud; p. 125). Some clear examples of the uncanny that I took from the reading seem to be coincidence or déjà vu, feeling an oddness, like something unnatural is occurring.