phantasmatic
English
Etymology
From Late Latin phantasmaticus.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /fantəzˈmatɪk/
Adjective
phantasmatic (comparative more phantasmatic, superlative most phantasmatic)
- Phantasmal, incorporeal. [from 17th c.]
- 1990, Judith Butler, Gender Trouble, Taylor & Francis 2002, p. 85:
- The recourse to the unconscious as a source of subversion makes sense, it seems, only if the paternal law is understood as a rigid and universal determinism which makes of ‘identity’ a fixed and phantasmatic affair.
- 1990, Judith Butler, Gender Trouble, Taylor & Francis 2002, p. 85: