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The Imaginary

About: The Imaginary is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 4807 publications have been published within this topic receiving 87663 citations.


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Dissertation
08 Apr 2011
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a transversal analysis of the endurance of national imaginaries and the modern paradigm of exclusion they reproduce, focusing on mainstream political discourses in Britain, France and Poland between 2004 and 2009.
Abstract: Since 1989, nationalism has once again become a major discursive theme in European public and political spaces. Nationalism has thus become "banalised" (according to Michael Billig), relegating the complexities of social histories to mere cultural 'Others'. The common origin of the resulting social and symbolical tensions can be found in the promotion of State-centred nationalist discourses. The dominant discourse on national identity aims for the reproduction of a continuity of traditional national values and histories in reaction to the threat it perceives in the presence of multiple 'Others'. This transversal study presents a social-historical analysis of the endurance of national imaginaries and of the modern paradigm of exclusion they reproduce. By elaborating a theoretical framework as an open system (Edgar Morin) to make sense of the complex relations between texts, ideology and the social imaginary (Cornelius Castoriadis), the aim of the thesis is the analysis of the dynamic symbolic promotion, expression and contestation - negotiations of social signification - of national imaginaries. Basing on the study of texts expressing these negotiations, the formation and consolidation of British, French and Polish national imaginaries in the late modern period is articulated through this framework. The analysis then focuses on mainstream political discourses in Britain, France and Poland between 2004 and 2009 which is contrasted with the analysis of contemporary texts of popular culture.

25 citations

Book
01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: This book discusses representations of Brazil from Revolutionary to Dystopian Brazil on screen, modernist Brazil to Modernist Brazil, and the Foundations of a National Literary Imaginary.
Abstract: * Acknowledgments * Introduction * Chapter One: Edenic and Cannibal Encounters * Chapter Two: Paradise (Re)Gained: Dutch Representations of Brazil and Nativist Imaginary * Chapter Three: Regal Brazil * Chapter Four: The Foundations of a National Literary Imaginary * Chapter Five: Modernist Brazil * Chapter Six: Good Neighbor Brazil * Chapter Seven: From Revolutionary to Dystopian Brazil on Screen * Epilogue: Land of the Future * Notes * Bibliography * Index

25 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The female roles portrayed in The Awakening are rooted in an ideological system as discussed by the authors, a resistance to obstacles to female fulfillment in nineteenth-century women's discourse was an oppositional ideology.
Abstract: Nineteenth-century feminist discourse was an oppositional ideology, a resistance to obstacles to female fulfillment. The hegemonic institutions of nineteenth-century society required women to be objects in marriage and in motherhood, existing as vessels of maternity and sexuality, with little opportunity for individuality. As critic Margit Stange asserts, "self-ownership" was central to the project of nineteenth-century feminism (506). Self-ownership connoted a woman's right to have possession of her own fully realized human identity. Inherent in this concept was not only sexual freedom and other aspects of personhood, but also "a sense of place in the community and the universe at large," through love, connection, maternity, and other aspects of fulfillment (Toth 242). Kate Chopin's The Awakening is, as Chopin biographer Emily Toth posits, "a case study" of nineteenth-century feminism (242). Indeed, Edna Pontellier's first consciousness of her awakening is described in terms that echo the nineteenth-century feminist concept of female identity: "Mrs. Pontellier was beginning to realize her position in the universe as a human being, and to recognize her relations as an individual to the world within and about her" (Chopin 57). Her awakening makes visible her position in patriarchal society and gives her the desire to seek alternative roles. The female roles portrayed in The Awakening are rooted in an ideological system. Louis Althusser's "Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses" provides an ideological framework for the female roles and experiences portrayed in the novel. This framework also implicates the ideological system of nineteenth-century society as the ultimate culprit in Edna's fate. According to Althusser, the mechanism of hegemony is "interpellation," the recognition and adoption of an ideology and its practices (299). Edna's awakening allows her to resist the various "interpellations" of the dominant patriarchal ideology and experiment with both alternative and oppositional roles. Her new consciousness makes her ill-suited for the limited female roles, those of the hegemonic ideal and those opposed to this ideal, offered her by nineteenth-century society. Edna experiments with two roles in particular, embodied by central female characters in the novel, Adele Ratignolle and Mademoiselle Reisz. In addition, Edna also experiments with an oppositional role that, significantly, is not embodied by any female character in the novel, a role in which she is both freely sexual and autonomous. Because of her strong interpellation as a mother, a role dictated for married women by hegemonic ideology in her society, she finds that she cannot exist in an alternative or oppositional female role. However, because of her awakening to herself as an individual, she cannot exist in the female roles sanctioned by patriarchal ideology. Her only escape from this ideology is death, and hence, Edna commits suicide at the site of her awakening, "the sea" (Chopin 57). Edna takes drastic action to elude the ideological system into which she is born. She is repressed by cultural forces that she does not understand and cannot articulate. Althusser's theory provides a clear language, as well as a systematic mechanism, to account for the ubiquitous presence of nineteenth-century cultural force and its perpetuation of hegemonic ideology. Althusser's cultural theory explains the structure and function of ideology, his central thesis stemming from Antonio Gramsci's concept of hegemony. In cultural theory, the term describes the dynamic by "which a dominant class wins the willing consent of the subordinate class to the system that ensures their subordination" (Fiske 310). Consent is not static, but must be "won and rewon" (Fiske 310). Althusserian theory accounts for the manner in which ruling, or hegemonic, discourses and institutions perpetuate the necessary consent for their dominance. Ideology, the powerful force behind the dominance of hegemonic institutions, is defined by Althusser as an "imaginary relation to the real relations of existence" (299). …

25 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023563
20221,296
2021145
2020180
2019178
2018199