Abstract
This is a review of Christine Coffman's 2006 study of the figuration of lesbianism in twentieth century literature and social thought, Insane Passions: Lesbianism and Psychosis in Fiction and Film . The book examines texts such as Andre Breton's Nadja, Jacques Lacan's early essays in the art journal Minotaure , Djuna Barnes's Nightwood , and H.D.'s autobiographical prose, and Coffman studies how the psychotic lesbian emerges as a figure within modernist thought. The book's principal contribution to modernist studies lies in studying, rather than simply deploying, psychoanalysis and queer theory within the context of modernist literature and film.
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