Taking Sides on Severed Heads: Kristeva at the Louvre

Authors

  • Alison Jasper University of Stirling

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2478/texmat-2014-0012

Abstract

The theorist and philosopher Julia Kristeva is invited to curate an exhibition at the Louvre in Paris as part of a series-Parti Pris (Taking Sides)- and to turn this into a book, The Severed Head: Capital Visions. The organiser, Régis Michel, wants something partisan, that will challenge people to think, and Kristeva delivers in response a collection of severed heads neatly summarising her critique of the whole of western culture! Three figures dominate, providing a key to making sense of the exhibition: Freud, Bataille, and the maternal body. Using these figures, familiar from across the breadth of her work over the last half a century, she produces a witty analysis of western culture’s persistent privileging of disembodied masculine rationality; the head, ironically phallic, ironically and yet necessarily severed; the maternal body continually arousing a “jubilant anxiety” (Kristeva, Severed Head 34), expressed through violence. Points of critique are raised in relation to Kristeva’s normative tendencies-could we not tell a different story about women, for example? The cultural context of the exhibition is also addressed: who are the intended viewers/readers and whose interests are being served here? Ultimately, however, this is a celebration of Kristeva’s tribute to psychic survivors.

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Author Biography

Alison Jasper, University of Stirling

Alison Jasper is Lecturer in Religion in the Division of Literature & Languages (School of Arts & Humanities) at the University of Stirling, Scotland. She has a background in feminist theology and biblical studies and has also published widely on the work of Julia Kristeva, most recently on her trilogy Female Genius (1999–2002) in the monograph Because of Beauvoir: Christianity and the Cultivation of Female Genius (Waco TX: Baylor UP, 2012) and on This Incredible Need to Believe (2006) in the journal Feminist Theology. She is also involved in research into gender and teaching religion, with a new jointly authored title, Schooling In/difference, due to appear in 2015. She has been the Reviews Editor of the International Journal, Literature & Theology since 2001.

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Published

2014-11-25

How to Cite

Jasper, A. (2014). Taking Sides on Severed Heads: Kristeva at the Louvre. Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture, (4), 173–183. https://doi.org/10.2478/texmat-2014-0012