by Andrew Parker (Author)
In The Theorist's Mother one of our subtlest literary theorists turns his attention to traces of the maternal in the lives and works of canonical male critical theorists. Noting how the mother is made to disappear both as the object of theory and as its subject, Andrew Parker focuses primarily on the legacies of Marx and Freud, who uniquely constrain their would-be heirs to return to the origin of each founding figure's texts. Analyzing the effects of these constraints in the work of Lukacs, Lacan, and Derrida, among others, Parker suggests that the injunction to return transforms the history of theory into a form of genealogy, meaning that the mother must somehow be involved in this process, even if, as in Marxism, she seems wholly absent, or if her contributions are discounted, as in psychoanalysis. Far from being marginalized, the mother shows herself throughout this book to be inherently multiple and therefore never simply who or what theory may want her to be. In a provocative coda, Parker considers how theory's mother troubles will be affected retroactively by scientific advances that make it impossible to presume the mother's gender.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 192
Publisher: Duke University Press
Published: 25 May 2012
ISBN 10: 082235232X
ISBN 13: 9780822352327
Book Overview: In this work, Andrew Parker undertakes a critical reconsideration of the frequently absent, or troubled, figure of the mother in theorists including Marx, Freud, Lacan, and Derrida. Parker argues that while all philosophers have mothers and the idea of 'birth' makes frequent appearances in philosophy (theorists are said to give birth to schools of thought), mothers themselves are strangely absent. What accounts for this trouble with maternity, even in the work of some feminist theorists? Parker is a highly regarded critical theorist working with feminist and queer theory and this is a long-awaited book.
- Alison Stone, Hypatia
Andrew Parker is Professor of English at Amherst College. He is the editor and co-translator of Jacques Ranciere's The Philosopher and His Poor and a co-editor of After Sex? On Writing since Queer Theory, both also published by Duke University Press.