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Original Article

The Lethic Phallus: Rethinking the Misery of Oedipus

Pages 719-753 | Published online: 12 Sep 2017
 

Abstract

The author rethinks Sophocles’ dramas Oedipus the King and Oedipus at Colonus with a special focus on how self- and object-preservative drives are expressed in the protagonist’s thoughts, feelings, and actions. What endangered Oedipus’ survival at the beginning of his life—the planned infanticide—becomes the disease that later befalls his kingdom and finally culminates in his self-mutilation, which entitles the blinded Oedipus to be cared for by Antigone until he dies. The concept of the lethic phallus demonstrates how trauma and the resultant failure in structuring the lethic energies of the preservative and death drives can result in a specific pathology in which disease is used as a trophy and a means to bind the object in an ongoing caretaker relationship.

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