Doug Lain
Articles by
Doug Lain
The Fate Of Slavoj Žižek
Could Žižek really have been only pretending to be some sort of radical leftist all along? Was his endorsement of Trump to be taken at face value, or was there, yet again, some more subtle point he was making?
Glenn Beck, Nihilism, And “In The Dust Of This Planet”
When Glenn Beck heard that Jay-Z had sported a leather jacket with the cover of Eugene Thacker’s book “In the Dust of this Planet” stenciled on the back, he got mad.
In Praise Of Netflix
The triumph of Netflix means you can stop listening to silicon valley hippies and anti-copyright advocates.
The Top Three Ways To Enjoy The New “Arrested Development”
In fact, the suffering of the characters on “Arrested Development” is a kind of mirror of the suffering we ourselves seek after.
Don’t Be Fooled: “Arrested Development” Is Freudian
To really understand why and how Freud is at the center of the show you have to look past the obvious plot points with Buster and his mom.
Enjoy Yourself, Parts 1-3: A Letter to Daniel Coffeen
No doubt, there are plenty of pleasures to be had today. But is it possible to enjoy yourself, to live through yourself rather than through the ubiquitous corporate Hollywood haze of images, desires, and emotions? Is this a question even worth asking?
Screen Memories And Phantasies
What is a phantasy? The word is spelled in a funny way, right? Instead of the word fantasy with an ‘f,’ (a word that indicates the presence of trolls, dragons or a fairy prince who lives under the Dursley’s stairs) phantasy with a ‘ph’ is a technical word.
The Words “Love” And “Revolution”
Let’s stick with revolution. At the end of Michael Hardt’s interview he says that the location they picked for the conversation was all wrong. Central Park Lake is too aristocratic a location to stage a talk of revolution, but he rejects other possible locations as clichéd. He rejects the background of the slums as perhaps maudlin, and claims that a factory, or the point of production, would also be clichéd.
There Is No Monster At The End Of This Essay
I was 11 years old and visiting Europe with my parents on my first trip outside the United States, when I first encountered and rejected the reality of my own strangeness. I was climbing on a concrete play structure in Stockholm– an undulating biomorphic sculpture that was matronly, grey, and curved in such a way as to encourage a boy to touch.
God Is A Subliminal Columbo
This is not a fair characterization of psychoanalysis as the purpose of analysis is precisely the opposite. That is, rather than attempting to transform the banalities of bourgeois life into mystified objects of desire, the analyst aims at exposing how these object of desire are just projections onto banality.
Why I Don’t Understand Slavoj Zizek: Psych vs. Columbo
The psychoanalyst who works in reverse would tell you, “I don’t really know anything. That suspicion you have that I know something, that I might be able to let you in on some secret, well that is your sickness itself. All you need do is realize that I have nothing to tell you and you’ll be free.”
Five Steps For Understanding Althusser’s Concept of Ideology Without Going Insane
Ideologies are fantasies that support our relationships with each other and these false pictures give us our very identities. In fact, we don’t really fantasize about the world, but rather we are the fantasy. Our relationships and thus our very identities are not backed up by anything.