Article published In: Reinardus: Yearbook of the International Reynard Society
Edited by Baudouin Van den Abeele and Paul Wackers
[Reinardus 20] 2008
► pp. 153–169
Lacan and le con: Exploring the Feminine in the Roman de Renart
Published online: 12 December 2008
https://doi.org/10.1075/rein.20.10wei
https://doi.org/10.1075/rein.20.10wei
This article explores Renart’s relationship with the feminine across the various branches of the Roman de Renart. At the same time a creation of Eve (in the Enfances), and the creator of Woman’s essence, her genitalia (in Labourage/Connin), Renart obsessively circles the feminine: seeking to control it through physical power (the rape of Hersent in Renart et la love), fantasizing about it (in Le Puits) and talking about it endlessly (especially in the Confession). The enigmatic object of his desire, the con, is a dark abyss to which he returns over and over again, seeking to understand it, even to refashion it, yet he is never able to achieve true mastery of it. Using Lacanian theory and Freud’s theory of jokes, this article examines Renart’s obsession, aiming to show that the fox as trickster/jokester is less in control than he believes: he is as much controlled and defined by the feminine as he is its absolute master and the imagined key to its ultimate meaning.
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