Dora: A Headcase , livre ebook

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Ida has a secret: she is in love with her best friend. But any time she gets close to intimacy, Ida faints or loses her voice. She needs a shrink. Or so her philandering father thinks. Immediately wise to the head games of her new shrink, Siggy, Ida - and alter-ego Dora - hatch a plan to secretly film him. But when the film goes viral, Ida finds herself targeted by unethical hackers. Dora: A Headcase is a contemporary coming-of-age story based on Freud's famous case study, retold and revamped through Dora's point-of-view. Yuknavitch's Dora is radical and unapologetic - you won't have met a character quite like her before.
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Date de parution

05 septembre 2019

Nombre de lectures

1

EAN13

9781786893338

Langue

English

Also by Lidia Yuknavitch

The Misfit s Manifesto
The Book of Joan
The Small Backs of Children
The Chronology of Water
Real to Reel
Allegories of Violence
Liberty s Excess
Her Other Mouths
Caverns

First published in Great Britain in 2019
by Canongate Books Ltd, 14 High Street, Edinburgh EH11TE .
This digital edition first published in 2019 by Canongate Books
canongate.co.uk
Copyright Lidia Yuknavitch, 2012
Introduction Chuck Palahniuk, 2012
The moral right of the author has been asserted
First published in the United States by Hawthorne Books Literary Arts, 2201 Northeast 23 rd Avenue, 3 rd Floor, Portland, Oregon 97212
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available on request from the British Library
ISBN 978 1 78689 332 1
eISBN 978 1 78689 333 8
Crisis as Content: An Introduction
LEAVE IT TO LIDIA YUKNAVITCH TO TAKE US ALL TO THE next level.
It wasn t that many years ago that rich people could get gussied up, wearing pearls and silver-buckled shoes, coats trimmed in ermine, diamond tiaras and velvet gloves, and thus attired trot through lunatic asylums to watch the resident nutcases masturbate and eat feces. Such a bother, for the rich sane people, all that trotting, I mean. Nowadays, we simply recline on the sofa at home, sipping from our goblets of pinot noir. True, we re forced to peel our own jumbo shrimp, but that s the worst of it. Otherwise, we ogle the usual line-up of basket cases: There s the compulsive hoarder, buried in heaps of squalid garbage and poo-sodden adult diapers. There s the staggering, puke-glazed drunk or pill popper. There s the always-entertaining sexual compulsive - that constantly jerking off, pussy paddling freak show. And there s the obese food-gobbling blimp.
The biggest difference between our modern loony bin slumming and the more ancient practice is that these days we don t have to smell the mess. It s still an exhibition, but today we can observe it from the comfort of our living rooms. Yes, because now the crazies are televised. It s crises as commodity, or - as I like to call it - Thera-tainment. Oh, the titles of the programs change, but the die is cast. The shows are called Intervention or Hoarders or Too Fat for Fifteen or Bad Sex . And the people appearing on them seem to do so because they have no private options left. Here are the same folks who d be condemned to the public loony bin or the workhouse of an earlier century. The indigent town drunks or village idiots or neighborhood dirty old men.
Each television show is structured in three dramatic acts. In the first, we witness the vibrant, promising child. There are always baby pictures dredged up, primary school portraits of smiling kids wearing braces on their teeth. In the second act we see what this innocent tyke has become: a home-bound recluse, a bloated pig, a drooling junky, or a skulking porn addict. And in the third act the object of our voyeuristic gaze is offered stern redemption. In fact the entire show is marketed as a redemptive process. We re only here to help. It s with a sincere mask of empathy that we look down on these poor, troubled souls. In this final act, mental health professionals enter to teach coping skills and offer alternative methods of impulse control. It would all be so healthy and productive except for the fact that the junkies are wired with microphones; everyone s lower back has the square, tell-tale bulge of a mic pack hidden under his or her clothes. The fatties are gorging on fried chicken, sweating under bright camera lights. And always, unseen, is a crew of people staging every shot.
Worth mentioning here is how all this fuss undermines our concept of aberrant, self-destructive behavior as an illness. Watching Intervention or Hoarders , the viewer can t help but wonder if it s not all a performance: fake symptoms met with fake therapy and resulting in a fake recovery. Here s apparent proof that the mentally disturbed are, as we ve always suspected, simply pretending in order to get more attention.
But, golly gee whiz, it s all so captivating. Really, there but for the grace of God go you and me. Without health insurance, that would be us parading our dirty psychiatric laundry to Dr. Phil and Dr. Laura, giving good Thera-tainment value in exchange for their scant advice. Plus a miserly ration of their tough love.
Most often the object s ultimate fate is revealed with a single-card message. It s a sentence or two presented in reverse type, white letters on a field of absolute black. Either the stricken sinner accepts the new teaching or they reject it. They live or die. Black or white. All or nothing. And most weeks, the fatty or junky or perv is saved. Hallelujah. But every so often the meth-tooting zombie or ranting shut-in dies in the noxious bed of his or her own making.
It always was a kind of slumming: the sane descending to observe the insane, people with money and power staring at those without. It s best not to mention the implied moral lessons about gluttony, lust, greed, and sloth pushed to their extreme, albeit so-deserved, fates. But it does suggest the Saved laying pitying eyes upon the Damned. In the same way we currently trawl cable channels for these train wrecks, no doubt the angels of Heaven will enjoy their eternity all the more because they ll be granted the occasional stroll among those suffering in Hell.
What s not to love? That s Thera-tainment. It offers us a sense of superiority, comfort, catharsis. Each episode is less a melodrama than a cautionary tale or sermon. And the experts imported - the licensed clinical social workers, household organizers, personal trainers, dieticians, etc. - they re nothing less than evangelical missionaries, these disciples of Freud and Jung and Skinner. On a side note, it s ironic how the same institutions which confined the insane also protected them from such media exploitation. Remember the hue and cry over the Diane Arbus photos taken at Willowbrook? Where once only the rich could afford to pay the bribes or donations that gave them access to ogle, now everyone who can afford basic cable can enjoy the pathos.
So-called reality television, what started as merely observation (think of An American Family in the 1970s) and practical jokes (think of Candid Camera in the 1950s) was not about fixing people. Not at first. But now under the guise of empowerment, the scientific equivalent of a Billy Sunday tent revival, dozens of them, comes into our homes every week. So where do we go from here? Now that we ve recognized the profit and status motives of these doctors, trainers, bullies, what s next?
Leave it to Lidia Yuknavitch to show us.
Turnabout is more than fair play; it s healthy. Perhaps as the weak ill subjects are exploited for Thera-tainment, now they ll redirect the public gaze back, onto their healthy would-be rescuers. The exhibitors will become the exhibition. Only Lidia Y could see where this zeitgeist was going. In Dora , she takes the most classic model of Thera-tainment, personal-crisis-as-content, and she re-imagines it wonderfully reversed.
Imagine if Pat and Bill and Lance Loud had covertly decided to counter-manipulate filmmaker Craig Gilbert and public television. It s easy to see how that would ve reunited their unhappy family. Or, imagine if some poor sucker on a New York City sidewalk had slammed a cream pie into the smirking face of Allen Funt. That, that would be empowerment. An observed subject secretly, masterfully controlling the observer; that would demonstrate healthy self-actualization. As usual, Lidia Y is running miles ahead of the popular culture. We can t say she hasn t warned us.
The world of Dora is not just possible, it s inevitable. It s revenge as the ultimate therapy.
- CHUCK PALAHNIUK
This book is for every teen who ever got treated like something was wrong with them, when really they were opening the portal for all of us. I made this for you. Also, you are right. The adult world IS a Fellini movie.
It is fatal to be a man or woman pure and simple; one must be woman-manly, or man-womanly.
VIRGINIA WOOLF
Nothing has really happened until it has been described.
VIRGINIA WOOLF
Contents
Crisis as Content: An Introduction
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Epiloguish Thingee
Because I Know You Want to Know
Acknowledgements
1.
MOTHER IS CLEANING THE SPOONS AGAIN. FROM WHERE I sit in the kitchen, I can see the reflection of her trippy-looking head: bulbous skull, stretched-down mouth, eyes that scoop away at the rest of her face. A droop-faced woman. Jeeeez. Just look at her. She s rubbing the holy crap out of those spoons. Poor, silvery utensils.
That s what it felt like to be her kid, too.
I can see the inside out of this city from our lame kitchen window. Everything gray going to blue to black. Seattle streets running for all they are worth. Puny pedestrians. Sheets of rain. I can see the Space Needle. Possibly the dumbest thing ever. Rain life makes the scene out the high-rise condo seem like you are in a dream. I put my hand on the window and watch fog surround my fingers. I take my hand away. There I am. A trace. See-through girl. In a pink terry robe and two-day-old underwear. I want a cigarette.
MOTHER. I SIGH . She will rub the spoons until she wipes herself clean.
I rub my eyes. My face feels smeared.
You know what? Seventeen is no place to be. You want to get out, you want to shake off a self like old dead skin. You want to take how things are and chuck it like a rock. You pierce your face or you tattoo your skin - anything to feel something beyond the numb of home. You invent clothes other people think are garbage. You get high. You meddle with sexuality. You stuff your ears with ear buds blasting music

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