| Synopsis | 第1-6页 |
| 中文摘要 | 第6-12页 |
| Introduction | 第12-16页 |
| Chapter One Richard Wright and Native | 第16-21页 |
| ·A Brief Introduction of Richard Wright | 第16-17页 |
| ·The Story of Native Son | 第17-18页 |
| ·Criticism about Native Son | 第18-21页 |
| Chapter Two The Three Orders of Lacanian Theories and Bigger as a Fragmented | 第21-39页 |
| ·Jacques Lacan and Psychoanalysis | 第21-23页 |
| ·The Three Orders of Lacanian Theories | 第23-26页 |
| ·The Interplay of the Symbolic and the Imaginary in Bigger’s World | 第26-39页 |
| ·The Mirror Stage and Fragmented Subject | 第26-28页 |
| ·Bigger’s Imaginary Identification with the White World and Its Influence on Him | 第28-34页 |
| ·The Symbolic Culture in America | 第34-39页 |
| Chapter Three Lacan’s Desiring Subject and Bigger’s Desire for “Whiteness” | 第39-58页 |
| ·Lacanian Concepts: Oedipal Complex, Desire, Phallus, Jouissance,and Symptom | 第39-44页 |
| ·Bigger’s Desire for “Whiteness” | 第44-55页 |
| ·The Meaning of “Whiteness”and “Blackness” | 第44-46页 |
| ·One’s Desire as the Desire of the Other | 第46-48页 |
| ·The Symptoms | 第48-55页 |
| ·Bigger’s Phobia of the Color “White” | 第48-50页 |
| ·Desire and Language | 第50-53页 |
| ·Aggressivity | 第53-55页 |
| ·The Paradox of “Whiteness”as Wholeness | 第55-58页 |
| Chapter Four Bigger’s Death Drive as a Tragic He | 第58-77页 |
| ·Death Drive as a Term | 第58-60页 |
| ·The Characteristics of the Death Drive and Bigger’s Death Drive | 第60-71页 |
| ·Repetition Automatism | 第60-62页 |
| ·Death Drive as Self-Destructiveness | 第62-63页 |
| ·Death Drive as a Constructive Force | 第63-65页 |
| ·Death Drive as Aiming at Jouissance | 第65-66页 |
| ·Death Drive as an Uncontrollable Force | 第66-71页 |
| ·Native Son as a Tragedy | 第71-75页 |
| ·The Characteristics of Tragedy | 第71-73页 |
| ·The Ethics of the Lacanian Tragedy | 第73-75页 |
| ·The Revelation of the Tragedy | 第75-77页 |
| Conclusion | 第77-79页 |
| Bibliography | 第79-82页 |
| Acknowledgements | 第82页 |