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Between the two deaths

48 bytes added, 20:59, 23 May 2019
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==One==
The [[space ]] of pure [[death drive]] without [[desire]], between [[symbolic]] death and actual death.
[[Lacan ]] associates this space with an unconditional, insistent [[demand]], like the demand from the [[ghost ]] of [[Hamlet]]'s father insisting that he be revenged. In [[popular culture]], this position is often taken up by the [[living ]] dead (ghosts, vampires, zombies, etc.), by, as [[Slavoj Zizek]] puts it, "the [[fantasy]] of a person who does not [[want ]] to stay dead but returns again and again to pose a [[threat ]] to the living."<ref>([[Looking ]] Awry 22)</ref>
We can also suffer a [[symbolic]] [[death]].
This is not the [[death]] of our actual [[bodies]].
This [[death]] entails the collapse of the [[symbolic]] [[order]] and the [[destruction ]] of our [[subject]] [[position]]s.
We can suffer a [[death]] in which we are [[excluded]] from the [[Symbolic]] and no longer [[exist]] for the [[Other]].
This can occur in [[psychosis]].
The gap between the two deaths, Žižek argues, can be filled either by manifestations of the [[monstrous]] or the [[beautiful]].
For example, in ''[[Hamlet]]'', the play by [[William Shakespeare]], [[Hamlet]]'s [[father]] is [[dead]] in the [[Real]].
However, he persists as a terrifying and [[monstrous]] [[apparition]] because he was [[murder]]ed and thereby cheated of the [[chance ]] to settle his [[Symbolic]] debts.
Once that debt has been repaid, following [[Hamlet]]'s killing of his murderer, he is 'completely' [dead]].
Correspondingly, in ''[[Antigone]]'', the play by [[Sophocles]], [[Antigone]] suffers a [[Symbolic]] [[death]] before her [[Real]] [[death]] when she is [[excluded]] from the [[community]] for wanting to bury her traitorous brother.
This destruction of her [[social]] [[identity]] instils her [[character ]] with a [[sublime]] [[beauty]]. Ironically, [[Antigone]] enters the [[domain ]] [[between the two deaths]] "precisely in order to prevent her brother's [[second death]]: to give him a proper funeral that will secure his eternalization."<ref>{{TTS}} p.170</ref>
That is, she endures a [[Symbolic]] [[death]] in order that her brother, who has been refused proper burial rites, will not suffer a [[Symbolic]] [[death]] himself.
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