Jacqueline Rose
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jacqueline Rose (born 1949 in London) is a British academic who is currently Professor of English at Queen Mary, University of London. Rose is known for her work on the relationship between psychoanalysis, feminism and literature. She is a graduate of St Hilda's College, Oxford and gained her higher degree (Mâitrise) from the Sorbonne and her doctorate from the University of London.
Albertine, a novel from 2001, is a feminist variation on Marcel Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu. As someone critical of zionism, in 2005 in the online political magazine Open Democracy, she called for an academic and cultural boycott of Israel.
Jacqueline Rose is a regular broadcaster and contributor to the London Review of Books. Her elder sister was the philosopher Gillian Rose.
[edit] Bibliography
- The Case of Peter Pan, or, the Impossibility of Children's Fiction, 1984
- Sexuality in the Field of Vision, 1986, Verso
- The Haunting of Sylvia Plath, 1991, Virago
- Why War – Psychoanalysis, Politics and the Return to Melanie Klein, 1993, Blackwell (co-authored)
- States of Fantasy (Clarendon Lectures in English), 1998, larendon Press [OUP]
- On Not Being Able to Sleep – Essays on Psychoanalysis in the Modern World, 2003, Chatto
- The Question of Zion, 2005, Princeton UniversityPress
- The Last Resistance, 2007, Verso
[edit] External links
- "Those opposing a cultural and academic boycott of Israel should examine the South African precedent, says Jacqueline Rose." Open Democracy September 4 2005 Jacqueline Rose's position on an academic and cultural boycott of Israel
- "This land is your land", The Observer, August 18, 2002 - Jacqueline Rose's views on the state of Israel
- "What Zionism is Not, a review of The Question of Zion
- Interview, The Guardian, January 4, 2003
- "The Ides Interview: Jacqueline Ross" - John Sutherland, The Guardian, November 28, 2005
- Interview with Jacqueline Rose, Open Democracy, August 18, 2005