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In the mid-1980s, film director Marco Bellocchio and renegade psychoanalyst Massimo Fagioli cowrote The Devil in the Flesh, a politically and sexually charged film illustrating some of Fagioli's controversial theories. Echoing the anti-Lacanian sentiment popularized by Gilles Deleuze, the film is perhaps best remembered for a scene in which the character Andrea misreads a section of the famous Greek tragedy Antigone. But this scene has itself been frequently misread, opening up the text to questions of feminism, politics, and the representation of Antigone—a figure frequently used and abused in feminist politics. Displaying considerable analytic depth, Misreading Postmodern Antigone considers these divergent readings and what they have to tell us about contemporary society.
Jan Jagodzinski is professor of art, media and education at the University of Alberta.
Introduction A Descriptive Analysis of the Text Patriarchy against Matriarchy? Antigone's Daughter and Haemon's Son Invade the Red Brigades The Framing of the French Letter: The Other Unseen/Scene Film Bellocchio's Anti-Tragedy as Seen/Scene Through Antigones Frames The Hysteric's Discourse: The Undutiful Daughter Leaving the Text: A Shock to Thought Into the Image: From Hysteria to the Schizo Secret