Disney and the Dialectic of Desire
Fantasy as Social Practice| By: | Joseph Zornado |
| Publisher: | Springer Nature |
| Print ISBN: | 9783319626765 |
| eText ISBN: | 9783319626772 |
| Edition: | 0 |
| Copyright: | 2017 |
| Format: | Page Fidelity |
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This book analyzes Walt Disney’s impact on entertainment, new media, and consumer culture in terms of a materialist, psychoanalytic approach to fantasy. The study opens with a taxonomy of narrative fantasy along with a discussion of fantasy as a key concept within psychoanalytic discourse. Zornado reads Disney’s full-length animated features of the “golden era” as symbolic responses to cultural and personal catastrophe, and presents Disneyland as a monument to Disney fantasy and one man’s singular, perverse desire. What follows after is a discussion of the “second golden age” of Disney and the rise of Pixar Animation as neoliberal nostalgia in crisis. The study ends with a reading of George Lucas as latter-day Disney and Star Wars as Disney fantasy. This study should appeal to film and media studies college undergraduates, graduates students and scholars interested in Disney.