Description: This first book-length discussion of the Iris Murdoch-Sigmund Freud connection shows her resistance to his theories to be based on her essential mysticism, her apparent need both to venerate and castrate her father, and her participation in an antirationalist trend. Her feud with Freud leads to a dialectic between religion and science in her novels, with Freud her favorite straw man, even while she employs his ideas to predict and provoke desired reader responses. Freud is a threatening father figure to Murdoch, though she learned important parts of her discourse from him. Thus, the theories of Jacques Lacan are also important to a complete analysis and understanding of Murdoch's philosophy and fiction. A detailed look at the situation offers a new hermeneutic for reading Murdoch, a great but didactic writer.
Review Quotes: «This perceptive critique of Iris Murdoch and her works goes well beyond what its title implies, for it is more than just a Freudian reading of the novels. Turner also examines Murdoch's fiction, philosophy, and popular appeal from the theoretical perspectives offered by Lacanian psychoanalysis and reader-response criticism. His insights are challenging, sometimes shocking, and well-defined throughout. Turner's provides both the general reader and the Murdoch scholar a refreshingly original view of her literary achievement.» (Thomas J. Rice, University of South Carolina)