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Session Minutes on Kristeva Julia
University of Zurich        Nadzhyie VelishaievaEnglish department         Session minutes on J.KristevaDr.des. Elizabeth Kollmann        Session 10“Methods & Theory”: Reading Critical Theories        20.11.2015   Julia Kristeva (born 24 June 1941) is a Bulgarian-French philosopher, literary critic, psychoanalyst, feminist, and, most recently, novelist, who has lived in France since the mid-1960s. She is now a professor at the University Paris Diderot. Kristeva became influential in international critical analysis, cultural theory and feminism after publishing her first book, Semeiotikè, in 1969. Her sizable body of work includes books and essays which address intertextuality, the semiotic, and abjection, in the fields of linguistics, literary theory and criticism, psychoanalysis, biography and autobiography, political and cultural analysis, art and art history. She is among the prominent figures in structuralist thought, while her works have also been recognized as having an important place in post-structuralism.An abjectIt is something what disturbs our identity system.It is part of us. We can’t get rid of it. It is the place for a meaning collapses, the distinction between life and death.It is something that disturbs us, but in the same way fascinates us. The abject is important for us to become individuals.It is something like rejection, for the borders of our subjectivity.    A subjective horror one, and therefore one’s body, experiences when one is confronted with what she terms one’s “corporeal reality,” or a breakdown in the distinction between what is self and what is other. Kristeva claims that within the boundaries of what one defines as subject – a part of oneself – and object – something that exists independently of oneself – there resides pieces that wereonce categorized as a part of oneself or one’s identity that has since been rejected – the abject. The concept of abjection is best described as the process by which one separates their sense of self – be that physical and biological, social or cultural – from that which they consider intolerable and infringes upon their ‘self’, otherwise known as the abject. The abject is, as such, the “me that is not me”.Subject’s developmentWhen the baby is born it doesn’t have any borders.Semiotic chora- the oneness of a person with the surrounding (when the baby is born he/she doesn’t understand him/herself like a separate individual person).Thetic break- that moment, when the child realizes, if the using of language helps to give the message to surrounding. He/she realizes that it’s a separate being. An abjection- are borders. From Kristevas psychoanalytic perspective, abjection is done to the part of ourselves that we exclude: the mother. We must abject the maternal, the object which has created us, in order to construct an identityThe mirror stage- a child recognizes (6-18 months) that he/she is something separate, complete.The symbolic realm- the time, when we are starting to use language, or different times of norms and lows. For to become the proper subjects of society.Art instead of religion   An abject (according to Kristeva) is always present, and that’s not good for a subject. We need always to push away the things, which are not good for us. Religion gave us the borders for what is good and what is bad. But now religion has gone. And for to replace it we have an art. Now we are not saying to everything: that’s wrong. We are trying to question the abject.Conclusion   An abject it is something what we will always have in our life. It is a part of ourselves; it’s something what we are always pushing away for to become a subject. It is something that after all fascinates us.

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“Session Minutes on Kristeva Julia” EssaysForStudent.com. 12 2015. 2015. 12 2015 < "Session Minutes on Kristeva Julia." EssaysForStudent.com. EssaysForStudent.com, 12 2015. Web. 12 2015. < "Session Minutes on Kristeva Julia." EssaysForStudent.com. 12, 2015. Accessed 12, 2015. Essay Preview By: NaVe Submitted: December 14, 2015 Essay Length: 636 Words / 3 Pages Paper type: Lab Report Views: 383 Report this essay Tweet Related Essays Beyond Crazy by Julia Nunes and Scott Simmie Introduction This paper will deal with cases from the book Beyond Crazy by Julia Nunes and Scott Simmie (McClelland and Stewart, 2002). I’ll be using 1,355 Words  |  6 Pages Julia Butterfly Hill American Heroin “Why should I care about some lady living in a tree?” Is the question that I asked myself before I read the book ‘The Legacy 1,086 Words  |  5 Pages 1984 Julia’s Story Creative Piece "Wake up!" a stern voice called from above. Her weary eyes slowly began to open. It was absolutely bright, however no windows were visible. Only 786 Words  |  4 Pages The Title of Vijay Tendulkar’s Silence the Court Is in Session SILENCE THE COURT IS IN SESSION 1) TITLE- The original title of the play is SHANTATA! COURT CHALU AHE. The words of the title are 1,007 Words  |  5 Pages Similar Topics 90 Minutes Perfection Julias Caesar Get Access to 89,000+ Essays and Term Papers Join 209,000+ Other Students High Quality Essays and Documents Sign up © 2008–2020 EssaysForStudent.comFree Essays, Book Reports, Term Papers and Research Papers Essays Sign up Sign in Contact us Site Map Privacy Policy Terms of Service Facebook Twitter

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