The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could; but when he ventured

Similar documents
inefficient so a person can never fully articulate his or her desires through words. However, the

The Cask of Amontillado

Abstract of Greg Zacharias s Essay: A Psychoanalytic Perspective on the Turn of the Screw

The Introduction. How to begin

The Cask of Amontillado

World History Guess the isms

Speculations on the Listener in The Cask of Amontillado

Copyright 1998 The Pennsylvania State University

Complete these questions on a separate sheet of paper. Be sure to use complete sentences!

by Edgar Allan Poe My Notes Short Story 96 SpringBoard English Textual Power Level 4

THE CASK OF. Part 1. The Story

The Cask of Amontillado (1849)

THE CASK OF AMONTILLADO. Edgar Allan Poe

1. Define point of view (look in the glossary of your text):

The Cask of Amontillado By Edgar Allan Poe 1846

The Devil s in the Details: A Characterization of Montresor in Poe s The Cask of Amontillado

The Cask Amontilladosive warmth,

(1846) "How?" said he. "Amontillado, A pipe? Impossible! And in the middle of the carnival!"

Ross C. Murfin, author and Professor of English states in his essay entitled

FACULTAD DE ESTUDIOS SUPERIORES CUAUTITLÁN CENTRO DE IDIOMAS Reading Level 7

Draught Draft, liquid that can be drunk in small amount rather than from a cask.

THE CASK OF AMONTILLADO by Edgar Allan Poe (1846)

The Cask of Amontillado. Is ever justified?

The Art of Dissimulation. The Good Christian vs. the Loyal Freemason

punish with impunity. A wrong is unredressed when retribution overtakes its Vocabulary

Edgar Allan Poe. Did You Know? Meet. Author of BACKGROUND FOR THE STORY ( )

Crumbling mansions, hearts that continue

TALES OF MYSTERY AND IMAGINATION

The Cask of Amontillado

Cask of. The. Edgar Allan Poe

Content Overview THE CASK OF AMONTILLADO

Short Stories 9 th Grade Pace High School

The Role of Repression in Nathanial Hawthorn s Young Goodman Brown. In Nathanial Hawthorn s Young Goodman Brown the struggle of the main character can

The Meaning of Judgment. Excerpts from the Workshop held at the Foundation for A Course in Miracles Temecula CA. Kenneth Wapnick, Ph.D.

trying to justify their belief that they should be God, or god-like. Their pride blinds them into

2 Beauty Beyond The Mask Ileen Bocanegra

Commodity Fetishism in Rickshaw Boy and Mine Boy. Lao She's Rickshaw Boy and Peter Abrahams Mine Boy provide an example of Slavoj

Gathering Song: The Ascension - Sanctify. Welcome - Pastor David. Better is One Day - Sanctify Mighty to Save Bind us Together.

Claudius as a Tragic Hero. There are multiple tragic heroes that can be identified in Hamlet by William Shakespeare,

Overcoming Fear and Rejection. Midweek Instruction Reid Temple AME Church Pastor Washington

What Will You Do with King Jesus?

Making peace with and honoring our parents is also a path to making peace with parts of ourselves. At the literal level, the commandment moves beyond

As for the pope s title, it is equally a title used by the Dalai Lama And he get a lot better press than the pope these days.

Bonus Questions for Women of the New Testament by Phyllis J. Le Peau

Freud s Challenge to the Moral Argument

36 Thinking Errors. 36 Thinking Errors summarized from Criminal Personalities - Samenow and Yochleson 11/18/2017

Devout Negation in Araby

Good Friday Yr A, 14/04/2017 Matt 27:11-54 Rev. Garth Wehrfritz-Hanson. Jesus suffering and death

Be Careful What You Pray For November 18, 2018 The Reverend George Anastos

Why I Love The Word of God. Psalm 119: Introduction: 1) In a devotional entitled How to Delight in God s Word, John

AMONG THIEVES How Can God Forgive Me?

Simone de Beauvoir s Transcendence and Immanence in the Twenty First. Novelist and philosopher Simone de Beauvoir wrote her magnum

The main reason we should forgive is because Jesus mandates it.

Usually, if not always, in Shakespeare s Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Hamlet is the one who

THEMES: PROMPT: RESPONSE:

RESOLUTIONS BEFORE THE ANNUAL CONFERENCE

Revelation Ch. 20: The Reign and Judgment

Seven Covenants: The Age of Conscience

Scripture: Psalm 32:1-11

Why. Eternal Hell! God created an. Chap. 1 pg. 1-3 Hell as the Antidote to future rebellions. Chap. 2 pg. 4-8 God s justice & Scriptures on Hell

LE PARI DE PASCAL - PASCAL'S WAGER. Claude Landeman

Sermon, Lent 2, Cashmere Presbyterian Rev Silvia Purdie

GEORGE BEST AND THE NAMES OF THE FATHER 1. Charles Melman

The Bible Meets Life

Sunday Worship Service September 10, 2017 Rev. YoungMin Kim Becoming Different Revelation 2:12-17

The Little objet a of Anarchist Philosophy

CANCER AS UNEXPRESSED OR UNRESOLVED COMPLAINT More on the Primary Mission Theory

La Historia De Esperanza / The Story of Hope. state of fear and confusion; resulting in a roller coaster of emotions that my adolescent hormones could

Every day, people fight an invisible battle in their mind. According to Sigmund Freud,

A Journey to emotional Healing DISMANTLINGS STRONGHOLDS/BREAKING THE CHAINS THAT BIND

The Way of the Cross Through the Voice of Victims Supporting Victims of Clergy Sexual Abuse

Introduction. The Death Penalty. Introduction. Introduction. Objections Against The Death Penalty. The Death Penalty

Medellín RVI - Prelude - Manel Rebollo

The Westminster Shorter Catechism in Modern English Translation: David Snoke, City Reformed Presbyteryian Church, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Genesis 1:1 (NKJ)

Of Mice and Men Mock Trial Expert Witness Packet

You Are Blessed Psalm 1 Dr. Michael Helms January 20, Or they might choose a player they don t need and trade that player for one they do.

Sermon: Introduction

Edgar Allan Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado" An Honors Thesis (HONRS 499) Chad M. Dyer. Thesis Advisor: Dr. Richard G. Brown. Ball State University

I m sure we would agree our experience tells us that it s not easy for anger be used constructively. Recycling Anger John 2:12-17, James 1:19-22

The Repression of Percy Jackson in the Lightning Thief Novel (2005) Merry Rullyanti and Ice Inda Rukmana University of Dehasen Bengkulu

Guilty Subjects: The problem of guilt in law, literature, and psychoanalysis. Fall 2012 IDSEM-UG Sara Murphy 1 Washington Pl,612

Plaintiff. v. CRIMINAL ACTION. 1. I am the mother of Michael Strenko. My son was murdered on May 15, 2003 by

TURNING EVIL INTO GOOD Genesis 45:1-8a, 50: Dr. J. Howard Olds August 11, 2002

GCSE Religious Studies: Paper 2, Unit 9: Judaism: beliefs and teachings. 9.6 The Promised Land and the covenant with Abraham

The Ladies Auxiliary, written by Tova Mirvis, illustrates a religious community struggling to

Three Perspectives. System: Building a Justice System Rooted in Healing By Shari Silberstein

Rise up, Judge of the earth; pay back to the proud what they deserve. 3

Challenges to Traditional Morality

THE DEADLY HABIT CALLED WORRY Sylvester Onyemalechi

The Down Side of Christmas Matthew 2: December 26, 2004 J. Howard Olds

MEMO Office of Stewardship PHONE (856) FAX (856)

THE FOX BY D.H. LAWRENCE: A PSYCHOANALYTICAL READING

St. Michael Eighth Grade Graduation Speech May 19, 2018 By Parishioner, Fred Phelan

Good Friday Three Hours Devotion Blessed are the peacemakers: The Centurion Mthr Jennifer Strawbridge

Unlocking the Prison of Fear

Are Women Clergy Changing the Nature And Practice of Ministry?

Excess: The Obscene Supplement in Slavoj Žižek s Religion and Politics. Tad DeLay

Wednesday Night Bible Class February 2, 2011 Dr. Derrick J. Hughes, Pastor The Fundamentals of Spiritual Growth

Ecclesiastes 5 (ESV) 5:1

Transcription:

Cooper 6 Caroline Cooper Psychoanalytic Paper ENGL 305 October 2710, 2014 Lacanian Analysis of Edgar Allan Poe s The Cask of Amontillado The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could; but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed revenge (Poe 14). These are the first words uttered by Montresor in Edgar Allan Poe s short story The Cask of Amontillado. According to Jacques Lacan s psychoanalytic theory the unconscious is structured as a language. Language is inefficient so a person can never fully articulate his or her desires through words. However, the unconscious is structured like a language, whereas Freud says the unconscious is associated with repression. Lacan believes that people strive for wholeness and completeness in the Real, or as Freud would define it, the superego which tells people how to behave through social norms and expectations such as family, religion, or education. The idea of the unconscious being structured as a language through a confession, jouissance, and the objet petit a are all represented in Edgar Allan Poe s short story The Cask of Amontillado. Greg W. Zacharias defines jouissance as, the combination of pleasure and ironic displeasure (324). The objet petit a is the eternally lacking object and is the main cause of desire. These two concepts relate to Montresor s mastery and control over Fortunato. The Cask of Amontillado is a confession where Montresor explains why and how he kills his friend Fortunato. The confession only enhances the fact that Montresor has insecurities with his masculinity because he needed to make sure others knew of his triumph over Fortunato. While the wine is Fortunato s privileged signifier this confession is Montresor s

Cooper 2 symbol of power. Montresor s main goal is to gain power over Fortunato and completeness as a man through jouissance, the objet petit a, and the confession or privileged signifier. Formatted: Font: (Default) Times New Roman, 12 pt Confession is a major concept in this short story, The confessional mode of the narrative increases rather than releases anxiety because, as Zizek writes, the more we submit ourselves to the superego imperative, the greater its pressure, the more we feel guilty (Zacharias 326). Montresor is the narrator of this story so he is, in fact, confessing to the murder of Fortunato, but he does not feel guilty. It must also be noted that the unconscious shapes the way the story is interpreted. Montresor explicitly states his intentions of not only killing Fortunato, but also killing him in such a way that no one would ever find out. If this is true there would be no need for a confession. It must be understood, that neither by word nor deed had I given Fortunato cause to doubt my good-will. I continued, as was my wont, to smile in his face, and he did not perceive that my smile now was at the thought of his immolation (Poe 14). The question is why Montresor feels the need to tell the reader all about his elaborate plan to kill Fortunato if he repeatedly mentions the importance of his impunity. While the wine is Fortunato s privileged signifier this story, this confession is Montresor s symbol of power. The reader can do nothing to stop him, the event already happened. By revealing his crime against Fortunato, Montresor gains power thus reaffirming his belief that he is not a murderer, but an avenger. He takes pleasure in his triumph of sealing up Fortunato for centuries to come and pleasure in the fact that he has committed his crime with impunity. The fact that his family s coat of arms is, a huge human foot d or, in a field azure; the foot crushes a serpent rampant whose fangs are imbedded in the heel (Poe 16) and his family s motto is, Nemo me impune lacessit translated to no one wounds me with impunity (Poe 16) reinforces the phallus symbol. Montresor is living up to the expectations set up by his forefathers

Cooper 3 through this motto, thus making him a real man of the family. This is why he needs the confession. In Ross C. Murfin s Psychoanalytic Criticism he explains, For boys, gender awareness involves another, more powerful recognition, for the recognition of the father s phallus as the mark of his difference from the mother involves, at the same time, the recognition that his older and more powerful father is also his rival (310). It is not because he feels guilty;, it is because he is proud of living up to his family s motto, getting the privileged signifier, and obtaining completeness in a Lacanian sense. Greg W. Zacharias defines jouissance as, the combination of pleasure and ironic displeasure (324). Montresor finds pleasure in avenging himself from Fortunato in an unhealthy way. This is described as jjouissance which means to find pleasure in pain.is finding pleasure in pain. Montresor finds pleasure in the torment he inflicts upon Fortunato. When Montresor first sees Fortunato he says, I was so pleased to see him, that I thought I should never have done wringing his hand (Poe 14). Clearly, he is not pleased to see him in the friendly way Fortunato believes. Montresor is happy to see him because he has an elaborate plan to kill him. This relates back to the pleasure he will get after inflicting pain upon Fortunato. Montresor also shows his jouissance while Fortunato is moaning in his soon to be grave: The noise lasted for several minutes, during which, that I might hearken to it with the more satisfaction, I ceased my labors and sat down upon the bones (Poe 18). Montresor was enjoying the agony of Fortunato so much that he actually had to take the time to stop and savor the moment. He clearly enjoys the torment he puts Fortunato through and his plan was prepared well in advance also in great detail. Montresor commits this crime against Fortunato because he confuses fantasy with realityfantasy should never be confused with reality. He feels that Fortunato has wronged him in a way that is unforgivable and because of this he forgets the reality of the situation. Zacharias

Cooper 4 says that, In Lacanian terms, fantasy defines a subject s impossible relation to the objet [petit] a (Zacharias 325). The concept of fantasy can also be related to The Cask of Amontillado. The objet petit a is the eternally lacking object and is the cause of desire. In Montresor s case he constantly thought about how he was wronged. Montresor says: The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could; but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed revenge. You, who so well know the nature of my soul, will not suppose, however, that I gave utterance to a threat. At length I would be avenged; this was a point definitely settled-but the very definitiveness with which it was resolved precluded the idea of risk. (Poe 14) The fantasy creates a new state of mind. In the long run, he feels he is entitled, and that it is his duty to kill Fortunato. Montresor also stresses that, I must not only punish, but punish with impunity (Poe 14). In his eyes, he is an avenger not a murderer. Montresor spent too much time brooding over how he was wronged by Fortunato and thus spent too much time fantasizing about how he would be avenged. What was so horrible that he needed to kill Fortunato? He killed him in such an inhumane and extremely premeditated way. He had everything planned out down to even the psychological aspect of the plan. Unlike Freud, Lacan talks about privileged signifiers as a symbol for the phallus and that males are conditioned to find completeness through the search for the phallus. Montresor finds this privileged signifier in the special wine, Amontillado. The wine represents power and Montresor uses this symbol of power to lure Fortunato down to the crypt. Montressor is working on the idea that Fortunato is in search of the phallus as well and makes it seem like he is giving him power. He constantly tells Fortunato that he values his opinion when it comes to the wine. Montresor validates him, thus placing that privileged signifier just within reach and then

Cooper 5 threatens to take that power, the privileged signifier, and phallic symbol away from him by mentioning Luchesi. Fortunato says, And as for Luchesi, he cannot distinguish Sherry from Amontillado (Poe 15). Luchesi is clearly someone Fortunato rivals with and feels he himself is superior. He is constantly mentioning Fortunato s enemy Luchesi to get him worked up. So he will not back out, Montresor also keeps mentioning his health as a way to irritate and annoy him into continuing in search of the coveted wine. His one last push to make sure he has Fortunato is when he says, Proceed, I said; herein is the Amontillado. As for Luchesi-- (Poe 18). After he chains him up he taunts him exposing his plan, Indeed it is very damp. Once more I implore you to return (Poe 18). Clearly, Montresor felt the need to murder Fortunato in order to feel complete within himself. He needed to live up to his family s motto and avenge himself from the wrongs he inflicted from Fortunato. Through his confession and living out his family s motto, Montresor gains the power and masculinity he desires. This power is symbolized through the privileged signifier, the Amontillado wine.

Cooper 6 Formatted: Left Works Cited Murfin, Ross C. Psychoanalytic Criticism and The Turn of the Screw: What is Psychoanalytic Criticism? in The Turn of the Screw. The Turn of the Screw. By Henry James. 3 rd ed. Ed. Peter G. Beidler. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin s, 2010. Print. Poe, Edgar Allan. The Cask of Amontillado. Literature A Portable Anthology. 3rd ed. Ed. Janet E. Gardner. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin s, 2013. 14-19. Print. Zacharias, Greg W. The extraordinary flight of heroism the occasion demanded of me : Fantasy and Confession in The Turn of the Screw. The Turn of the Screw. By Henry James. 3 rd ed. Ed. Peter G. Beidler. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin s, 2010. Print.