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~~ Download Stay, Illusion!: The Hamlet Doctrine, by Simon Critchley, Jamieson Webster

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Stay, Illusion!: The Hamlet Doctrine, by Simon Critchley, Jamieson Webster

Stay, Illusion!: The Hamlet Doctrine, by Simon Critchley, Jamieson Webster



Stay, Illusion!: The Hamlet Doctrine, by Simon Critchley, Jamieson Webster

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Stay, Illusion!: The Hamlet Doctrine, by Simon Critchley, Jamieson Webster

The figure of Hamlet haunts our culture like the ghost haunts Shakespeare’s melancholy Dane. Arguably, no literary work is more familiar to us. Everyone knows at least six words from Hamlet, and most people know many more. Yet the play—Shakespeare’s longest—is more than “passing strange,” and it becomes even more complex when considered closely. 
 
Reading Hamlet alongside other writers, philosophers, and psychoanalysts—Carl Schmitt, Walter Benjamin, Freud, Lacan, Nietzsche, Melville, and Joyce—Simon Critchley and Jamieson Webster go in search of a particularly modern drama that is as much about ourselves as it is a product of Shakespeare’s imagination. They also offer a startling interpretation of the action onstage: it is structured around “nothing”—or, in the enigmatic words of the player queen, “it nothing must.”
 
From the illusion of theater and the spectacle of statecraft to the psychological interplay of inhibition and emotion, Hamlet discloses the modern paradox of our lives: how thought and action seem to pull against each other, the one annulling the possibility of the other. As a counterweight to Hamlet’s melancholy paralysis, Ophelia emerges as the play’s true hero. In her madness, she lives the love of which Hamlet is incapable.
 
Avoiding the customary clichés about the timelessness of the Bard, Critchley and Webster show the timely power of Hamlet to cast light on the intractable dilemmas of human existence in a world that is rotten and out of joint.

  • Sales Rank: #777248 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2013-06-25
  • Released on: 2013-06-25
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From Booklist
It is rashness that we need in reading Shakespeare. Taking these words from Virginia Woolf as their license, the husband-wife team of Critchley and Webster advance a daring commentary on the Bard’s Hamlet. With help from other rash thinkers—­including Carl Schmidt, Hegel, Freud, and Nietzsche—also outside of the fraternity of literary critics, this philosopher-psychologist pair pry from Shakespeare’s play insights into politics, religion, and psychology. From Schmidt, for example, the authors steal a key for decoding a dangerous political message. (Did James I—like the troubled prince of Denmark—have a guilty mother and a murdered father?) With a nod to Hegel, the literary explorers glimpse in Hamlet’s wild exchanges with Guildenstern and Rosencrantz the hint of dialectical philosophy. Borrowing from Freud, the bold exegetes learn why Ophelia pays the price when Hamlet crosses from mourning into melancholia. And readers reckless enough to join Nietzsche in Dionysian dance will recognize in Hamlet the reason that only illusion can precipitate decisive action. A spirited literary foray by audacious interlopers. --Bryce Christensen

Review

“In their provocative new study, Simon Critchley, a professor of philosophy at the New School, and Jamieson Webster, a practicing psychoanalyst and author, offer a novel take on this most commented-upon of dramas. It is as much an astute account of the reactions of various philosophers and psychoanalysts to the play—and their often profound and sometimes wacky analyses—as a chronicle of the authors’ own passionate response to virtually every aspect of the tragedy. The authors have an impressive mastery of all the factual details of the play . . . their discussions of such thinkers as Hegel and Nietzsche or Freud and Lacan are at once pithy and perceptive.” —The Wall Street Journal

"Critchley and Webster's fierce, witty exploration of Hamlet makes most other writing about Shakespeare seem simple-minded." —Hari Kunzru, author of Gods Without Men 

“I had no time to read Stay, Illusion!, and yet I found myself ravenously turning pages. I absolutely love the book, which I think is brilliant both as a set of readings of the play and as a meditation on contemporary, post-illusion existence. Hamlet is, as everyone knows, about everything, but it’s also about nothing, or rather, nothingness. And this almost impossibly aphoristic book penetrates to the center of this paradox. A thrilling performance.” —David Shields, author of Reality Hunger  
 
"The gap between thought and action has rarely been contemplated with so much intellectual excitement and energy as it is in this book. Indeed, this study of Hamlet is a kind of thrill ride, a breathless investigation of some of the most important ideas from philosophy and psychoanalysis from the Modern era. But the great pleasure it holds in store for most readers has to do with its profound understanding of reflection, and its discontents." —Charles Baxter, author of The Feast of Love

“A brilliant set of readings of a work that, like an insistent ghost, seems to have more to tell us with each passing era.” —Tom McCarthy, author of Remainder   

"This is an engaging, eloquent, and insistently pleasurable text that makes the best case possible for "rash" reading.  Hamlet can now be read in light of a number of new theoretical vocabularies such that we cannot think about love, self-reflection, doubt, or obstinacy without being haunted by his ghost. This collaborative writing gives us a dynamic set of forays, recruiting us into the start and stop of thought, making Hamlet crucial for the thinking of our own impasses and delights. In the mix is a singular and illuminating encounter between philosophy and psychoanalysis." —Judith Butler  
 
“A philosophy professor and a psychoanalyst—also husband and wife—take Hamlet well beyond the confines of literary criticism and Shakespearean scholarship. . . . In a tone that is companionable and conversational despite the authors’ obvious erudition, the book examines Hamlet through a variety of lenses—philosophical, psychological, political, Christian redemptive—without resolving the tension between thought and action that remains the essence of the work and generates so much fascination with it. . . . Critchley and Webster provide plenty of food for thought and fuel for obsession.” —Kirkus  

“Critchley and Webster advance a daring commentary on the Bard’s Hamlet. . . . A spirited literary foray by audacious interlopers.” —Booklist  

“What more can be said about Shakespeare’s great Hamlet, known to just about every thinking person on earth? But this book is different, aiming not for literary but cultural and psychological analysis; the authors bring a different perspective to the work. Are you ready, Shakespearians? That is the question.” —Library Journal

“[An] insightful interpretation. . . . The authors’ passion for the play and its questions are clearly evident.” —Publishers Weekly

“Impressive…Critchley and Webster offer some intriguing and original thoughts on what Hamlet has to say about shame and love, taking up a new tone that suddenly makes the play feel intimately connected to both the authors themselves and the state of the world today…it's refreshing to read such unorthodox and enthusiastic explorations of canonical literature. Critchley and Webster manage to show both how philosophy and psychology illuminate Hamlet and how Hamlet, conversely, has illuminated those fields and the worlds around them.” –Bookslut

“Intriguing…Critchley and Jamieson's take always feels fresh, in part because they address a range of interpretations, many of which they are unafraid to challenge…Erudite, witty and probing, Stay! Illusion offers new insights into a literary touchstone while deepening our appreciation for its complexity and its enigmatic core.” –Shelf Awareness
 
“This is both an in-depth analysis of the play Hamlet and a study of our lives today. A compelling page turner, Stay, Illusion! digs deep into a character and play we all know, but perhaps haven't considered from this point of view.” –Largeheated Boy
 
“[A] thoughtful, elegant work of criticism.” –NPR.org, Best Books Coming Out This Week

About the Author

Simon Critchley is Hans Jonas Professor of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research. He also teaches at Tilburg University and the European Graduate School. His many books include Very Little . . . Almost Nothing, The Faith of the Faithless, and The Book of Dead Philosophers. He is the series moderator of The Stone, a philosophy column in The New York Times, to which he is a frequent contributor.
 
Jamieson Webster is a psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City. She is the author of The Life and Death of Psychoanalysis: On Unconscious Desire and Its Sublimation and has written for Apology, Cabinet, The New York Times, and many psychoanalytic publications. She teaches at Eugene Lang College at the New School and supervises doctoral students in clinical psychology at the City University of New York.

Most helpful customer reviews

28 of 29 people found the following review helpful.
For literate lovers of Hamlet who don't care about lit crit one whit
By Jessica Weissman
What we have here is what erudite and literate lay readers are supposed to want - a book that studies a work of art or a topic deeply and thoroughly without being part of the professional scholarly point-scoring competition. A married couple, one a philosopher and one a psychotherapist, both of whom love Hamlet as much as I do, have produced a book of short essays on this fascinating liberary work. Some are historical, sort of, some are just smart and thoughtful, some are misfires.

There's no overarching thesis, but who cares? If you are deeply familiar with the play why not spend a couple of hours watching some other interesting people think it through in front of you? Reminds me of a smarter and less callow version of the literary discussions I had as an undergraduate.

No, these people are not the modern day equivalent of J. Dover Wilson or J.V. Cunningham, but they are still able to raise interesting points and give me new things to think about.

So be sure what you're getting into here, and don't expect groundbreaking literary theory. Perhaps you could guess what some of the philosophers they talk about would think of Hamlet, but so what? Skip those essays if you must, and read the ones that appeal to you.

Why only four stars? Because I lost the thread in a few places and because there were some places where a little more research would have answered a few of the questions they raise. Still, a fine work for erudite Hamlet readers who are not professional Shakesperean scholars. You know who you are.

17 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
Challenge and Reward
By Thomas F. Dillingham
If I had followed my first responses to this book, I would not have read much past the first fifty pages. It seemed to me that though there were plenty of references in the opening chapters to concepts about Hamlet that might have been interesting if developed, the main discussion seemed simplistic, amateurish. I am not a trained Shakespearean scholar, but I have studied his works enough to have a pretty good command of the range of critical and interpretive discussions, and this seemed unlikely to add anything of interest.

Fortunately, I persisted, and found myself more and more fascinated and deeply involved in the presentation of Critchley/Webster's developing thoughts about the play, which broadened and deepened as they analyzed Hamlet as the centerpiece of increasingly complex and fascinating interrelationships among political, psychological, and philosophical questions embedded in the play (especially in the "character" of Hamlet, himself, but also of Ophelia and others). It is important to emphasize that this book is an unusual example of a truly collaborative work; both authors are obviously engaged in the composition/thought at every stage of the book, and their regular use of the plural pronoun "we" always feels convincing. This gives the essay an unfamiliar but welcome sense of being a conversation that actually includes the reader, even though the reader is left to direct her or his comments not to the joint authors but to a community of readers of Hamlet who might also benefit from the juxtaposition of the play with the range of other writings these authors explore in their effort to understand why Hamlet talks so much about revenging his father's death, but is unable to bring himself to do it. (They argue that Hamlet's final killing of Claudius does not revenge his father, but punishes Claudius for his treachery toward Hamlet himself.)

In their analysis of the play, these authors bring to bear a range of other thinkers' writings, including Plato, Gorgias, Carl Schmitt, Walter Benjamin, Sigmund Freud, Jacques Lacan, G.W.F. Hegel, Friedrich Nietzsche, and many others, but not, as a rule, critics of Shakespeare (though Terry Eagleton, Stephen Greenblatt and Harold Bloom are mentioned). The extensive and fascinating uses of the thoughts of Freud and Lacan would probably offer the greatest challenge to most readers, though the juxtaposition of Schmitt and Benjamin with the questions of kingship and political power (partially developed with a contrast between tragedy and trauerspiel, as developed by both Schmitt and Benjamin) is also thought-provoking.

One characteristic of the book that may seem trivial, but actually is an important part of its appeal is the structure--it is composed of many short chapters--in a book of 239 pages, there are 48 chapters, some as short as three pages, many in the five to seven page range. Each chapter has an intriguing, even provocative title. The value of this, to the reader, is the creation of a sense of manageable proportions, but with a continuing expansion and momentum as the complexity of the questions and juxtapositions increases.

As the chapters progress, the authors draw us deeper into the anxiety of misunderstanding or inadequate understanding created by our encounter with the character, Hamlet, whom they identify resoundingly as not a nice guy!, and in fact, not much of a hero. They effectively make their readers participate in the frustrations and perplexities they encounter themselves, and thereby create something rare, an essay that one almost wishes would continue further, and that certainly prompts the wish that one could be in the room with the authors, in a position to pursue the conversation indefinitely. Of course, for that, some of the credit goes to Hamlet, himself, and his creator, since that conversation, with changing personnel, has been going on almost without interruption for several hundred years.

Some patience, some persistence, may be needed, but the rewards of this fascinating essay will be forthcoming and bounteous.

16 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
Stange but interesting study of Hamlet
By Stanley Hauer
This is a curate's egg of a book. The authors are a married pair, one a psychologist the other a philosopher. Clearly they share a passion for this greatest of English plays and playwrights.

This modest volume is a collection of short essays on "Hamlet." Much of the contents are (understandably) philosophical, as they discuss how various philosophers, mostly French and German, have read and interpreted the play. Freud plays a large role here. Some of the philosophers (Carl Schmitt, for example) were new to me, but that says a great deal about me and nothing about philosophy.

I enjoyed every page of this book and profited from it. But for the life of me I can't tell you what its thesis is and what "The Hamlet Doctrine" of the title is supposed to mean. Reading this book is like having a month of dinners with two extraordinarily intelligent and well read intellectuals; their thoughts scintillate off the page.

The essays are exceptionally well written and blessedly jargon-free--rare in this lit-crit dominated age.

You have to know your "Hamlet" to follow this book; it's not for beginners. But for the devoted Shakespearean like Yours Truly, this book is time well spent.

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