•  4
    Lacan the Charlatan
    Palgrave MacMillan. 2020.
    This book sets out to determine the validity of an accusation made against Jacques Lacan by Noam Chomsky in an interview in 1989. He stated that Lacan was a “charlatan” – not that his ideas were flawed or wrong, but that his entire discourse was fraudulent, an accusation that has since been repeated by many other critics. Examining the arguments of key anti-Lacanian critics, Mathews weighs and contextualizes the legitimacy of Lacan’s engagements with structural linguistics, mathematical formaliz…Read more
  •  3
    ‘The Scrambled Script’: Contingency and Necessity in Iris Murdoch’s The Green Knight
    In Miles Leeson & Frances White (eds.), Iris Murdoch and the Literary Imagination, Springer Verlag. pp. 2147483647-2147483647. 2023.
    In this chapter, ‘The Scrambled Script’: Contingency and Necessity in Iris Murdoch’s The Green Knight’, Peter D. Mathews focuses on Murdoch’s penultimate novel through the lens of Nietzsche’s concept of eternal retour. Augmenting previous readings foregrounding Levinas and Schopenhauer by Kanan Savkay and Miles Leeson respectively and drawing together multiple critical interpretations of Murdoch’s ‘dizzying multiplication of references’ (136) in this heavily intertextual late work, Mathews persu…Read more
  •  23
    Although the desire to be free from God springs from humanity’s wish to enjoy pleasure without restraint, Lacan observes that humans remain neurotic and unhappy. That is because the prevailing “dead of God” form of atheism relies on the denial of a father/god, a negation that inadvertently replicates the logic of religion. Lacan, by contrast, grounds his atheism in a theory of pleasure that recognizes the role of “unpleasure” in breaking the tedium of easy, unlimited gratification. Turning to Gr…Read more
  •  23
    The Morality Meme: Nietzsche and A Serious Man
    Cultura 11 (1): 63-81. 2014.
    Pairing together the Coen brothers film A Serious Man with the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, this paper looks at questions about morality, illusion, and the influence of Jewish thought on contemporary ethics. Beginning with a reading of Nietzsche that locates his discussion of the Jews within its properhistorical context, it traces the beginnings of the “morality meme,” the notion of a universal moral reward that, Nietzsche argues, arises during the Deuteronomistperiod of Jewish history. Th…Read more