Cocteau, Jean - Susan B. Grayson (essay date 1986)

Susan B. Grayson (essay date 1986)

SOURCE: Grayson, Susan B. “The Other as Self in Cocteau's Les Enfants terribles.Perspectives on Contemporary Literature 12 (1986): 43-50.

[In the following essay, Grayson argues that the children in Les Enfants terribles represent a pre-Oedipal refusal to acknowledge the separation of self from other.]

Traditional interpretations of Les Enfants terribles, Cocteau's intriguing and personal work, note the Children's compelling beauty, the unreal spectacle of their living arrangements, and the sexual flavor of their uncompromising adolescence. A Lacanian reading, however, reveals Les Enfants as a different tale. The Children's twinship represents not a paean to youth but a primitive confusion of Self and Other, and their verbal games and treasured objects bespeak an undifferentiated, pre-Oedipal level of interaction. In effect, Paul and Elisabeth remain outside the...

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