An Unnerving Otherness: English Nationalism and Rusedski’s Smile

Published in Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society

Volume 26, Issue 4

with Robert J. Lake and Thomas Fletcher

Abstract

In view of scholarly work that has explored the socio-psycho significance of national performativity, the body and the “other,” this article critically analyses newspaper representations of the Canadian-born British tennis player Greg Rusedski. Drawing on Lacanian interpretations of the body, it illustrates how Rusedski’s media framing centered on a particular feature of his body—his “smile.” In doing so, we detail how Rusedski’s “post-imperial” Otherness—conceived as a form of “extimacy” (extimité)—complicated any clear delineation between “us” and “them,” positing instead a dialectical understanding of the splits, voids and contradictions that underscore the national “us.”


Keywords

extimate; Lacan; Englishness; fragmented body; the other