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    Jonathan Acuña Solano, Post Author
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The Gap of Desire: A Lacanian and Ironic Realist Reading of Wilbert Salgado’s “Diastema”

Irony, Jacques Lacan, Lacanian Analysis, Latin American Literature, Literary Analysis, Literary Criticism, Modern Realism, Nicaraguan Literature, Psychoanalysis, Wilbert Salgado 0 comments

 

"Fractured Identity”
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in November 2025

📜 Introductory Note to the Reader

     Wilbert Salgado is a friend and ELT colleague of mine. For sure his ars creativa is incredibly good, and this story, Diastema, is a good example of it.

     A short story does not have to be lengthy; it just needs to convey an idea through the plot, which is the one that needs to be dealt with as a reader. Wilbert is good at it.

     His constant experiments with his ars creativa have made him become a great representative of Nicaraguan literature.


The Gap of Desire: A Lacanian and Ironic Realist Reading of Wilbert Salgado’s “Diastema”

 

📜 Abstract

This essay explores the intersection between Lacanian psychoanalysis and the aesthetics of irony and modern realism in Wilbert Salgado’s short story. Drawing from Jacques Lacan’s theories on the symbolic, the mirror stage, and the divided subject, the paper situates Salgado’s narrative voice within a field of fractured identity and self-alienation. The analysis also highlights irony as a modern realist device that exposes the subject’s struggle for coherence within social and linguistic constructs. Supported by scholars such as Žižek, Eagleton, and Barthes, the discussion demonstrates how Lacanian thought deepens the understanding of contemporary Latin American short fiction. The essay concludes that Salgado’s narrative reveals the ironic disjunction between the self’s desire for wholeness and the impossibility of achieving it in modern realist representation.

📜 Keywords:

Jacques Lacan, Irony, Lacanian Analysis, Modern Realism, Psychoanalysis, Latin American Literature, Wilbert Salgado, Literary Analysis, Literary Criticism, Nicaraguan Literature

 

 

📜 Resumen

Este ensayo analiza la intersección entre el psicoanálisis lacaniano y las estéticas de la ironía y el realismo moderno en el cuento de Wilbert Salgado. A partir de las teorías de Jacques Lacan sobre el estadio del espejo, el orden simbólico y el sujeto dividido, el texto sitúa la voz narrativa de Salgado en un contexto de identidad fracturada y autoalienación. Asimismo, se resalta la ironía como un recurso propio del realismo moderno que revela la lucha del sujeto por mantener una coherencia dentro de las estructuras sociales y lingüísticas. Con el apoyo de teóricos como Žižek, Eagleton y Barthes, el ensayo demuestra cómo la teoría lacaniana amplía la comprensión de la narrativa contemporánea latinoamericana. En conclusión, la narrativa de Salgado pone en evidencia la disyunción irónica entre el deseo de totalidad del yo y la imposibilidad de alcanzarla en el marco del realismo moderno.

 

 

📜 Resumo

Este ensaio examina a intersecção entre a psicanálise lacaniana e as estéticas da ironia e do realismo moderno na narrativa de Wilbert Salgado. Baseando-se nas teorias de Jacques Lacan sobre o estágio do espelho, o simbólico e o sujeito dividido, o texto posiciona a voz narrativa de Salgado dentro de um campo de identidade fragmentada e autoalienação. A ironia é abordada como um instrumento essencial do realismo moderno, capaz de expor a tensão entre linguagem, desejo e verdade. Com apoio de estudiosos como Žižek, Eagleton e Barthes, o ensaio mostra como a perspectiva lacaniana aprofunda a leitura da ficção latino-americana contemporânea. Conclui-se que a narrativa de Salgado revela a disjunção irônica entre o desejo de completude do sujeito e a impossibilidade de realizá-lo dentro das limitações do realismo moderno.

 

 

Introduction

In Wilbert Salgado’s short story “Diastema,” the narrator visits a bar intending solitude, yet finds himself drawn into a magnetic, ambiguous encounter with a woman he projects his fantasies onto. On one level, the story reads as a witty vignette of failed seduction; on another, it reveals deeper dynamics of desire, identity, and self-deception. This essay argues that the titular “diastema” (a gap between teeth) functions as a metaphorical marker of the gap inherent to subjectivity and desire, and that through a Lacanian psychological lens we can trace how the narrator attempts to fill that gap via projection onto the other. In parallel, a literary reading grounded in ironic modern realism reveals how Salgado deploys contemporary everyday experience (the bar, the michelada, the UFC fight) to dramatize the discrepancy between fantasy and reality. Through this blog post I intend to analyze Wilbert’s story by using Lacanian concepts to examine the narrator’s psychic economy; then the subsequent part of my essay explores how irony and realist detail shape the narrative’s effect; then the conclusion will synthesize both approaches employed for the analysis.

Lacan: Lack and Desire

According to Jacques Lacan, desire is always structured around lack: “the subject’s desires are scripted … by an unconscious fundamental fantasy in which the desiring subject is positioned in relation to its corresponding object-cause of desire” (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2023). In Salgado’s story, “Diastema,” the narrator’s gaze falls on the woman, and he immediately begins to “fill in the missing parts” of her frame, “since I’m a Gestalt kind of man, I filled in the missing parts until her frame was complete.” He thus attempts to complete the “lack” in his own subjectivity via identification with her as fantasy object: she becomes less the other person and more a projection of his ideal. The titular gap, the diastema, becomes emblematic of the subject’s irreducible lack; the narrator sees it as physical and perhaps symbolic, the very opening he hopes she will “fix.”

Lacan: Desire of the Other and the Object petit a

Jacques Lacan states that “man’s very desire is constituted … under the sign of mediation: it is the desire to have one’s desire recognised” (LacanOnline.com, 2020). The narrator in Salgado’s story is acutely aware, though unconsciously, of being looked at: “Her pupils gleaned, bright and liquid, like the plastic of a brand-new cellphone just taken out of its box.” In that moment the narrator reads not just attraction, but recognition. He raises his mug and murmurs “Hi.” She responds with a nod. The shift from spectator to participant begins via that recognition. Yet the recognition is mis-registered: the narrator projects his own narrative of romance, when in fact the woman’s “interest” may simply be polite or ambiguous. As the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2023) notes, the object a is “a spectral, virtual construct … these substitutes are always and necessarily inadequate and unsatisfactory due to an insurmountable, ineliminable gap.” The narrator’s fantasy collides with reality when the bartender clarifies: “She’s a dentist. A lesbian. Says she can fix your diastema.” The fix he fantasized becomes literalized in a way he did not anticipate.

Lacan: Fantasy, the Gap, and Return to Solitude

Lacan emphasizes that fantasy structures the subject’s relation to desire: one endures the “lack” through the fantasy rather than eliminating it (Tel Journal, 2016). The narrator’s inner monologue reveals this: “My mating light flicked on. It had been a while since I’d had one of those romances that arrive by coincidence.” He ponders being “the cat that lost his life to curiosity—or if she’d purr.” But when the reality check arrives, that Solange is uninterested, he returns to isolation: “I don’t think I smiled again.” The fantasy evaporates, leaving the gap intact. In this way, Salgado dramatizes Lacan’s point that the subject cannot bridge the lack; the gap remains, and desire continues its circuit, often turning back into solitude.

Irony and Modern Realism: Everyday Scene and Disillusionment

On the literary plane, Salgado frames the story in mundane, everyday realism: a bar, a TV showing a UFC fight, micheladas, and a napkin with eight digits. These details root the narrative in contemporary urban life. Yet the tone is ironically poised: the very “romance that arrives by coincidence” arrives only to dissolve. The use of realistic detail heightens the ironic distance between the narrator’s expectations and his outcome. In the tradition of modern realism, everyday settings are not romanticized; here the bar becomes a space of longing and disappointment. As Stasi (2025) notes, “the form of the novel itself may have shifted in relation to the reality of the nation and of national-popular collective life.” Salgado, in his short-story micro-form, follows this lineage by using realistic detail to engage existential dynamics rather than grand historical sweep.

Irony: Projection and Self-Deception

Irony emerges strongly in the narrator’s self-presentation and projection. He remarks that he came “to enjoy my own company—a gift to myself after meeting everyone’s expectations all month long.” Yet we see immediately that he is scanning the room, looking for recognition; his solitude is fragile. His internal narrative frames the woman as “the kind of woman who could bewitch me like a siren,” even though his encounter is superficial and ill-fated. The sudden revelation at the end, she can fix your diastema, undercuts his fantasy with ironic precision. Lozano-Palacio (2019) argues that irony arises from “a clash between an echoed scenario and an observed scenario,” producing evaluative tension (p. 102). Salgado orchestrates that clash expertly.

Irony, Reader, and Interpretation in Latin American Short Fiction

In Latin American short fiction, irony has been studied as a strategy that reveals disjunctions of intention, identity, and desire. Adriaensen (2016) highlights how irony “plays with the distance between two opposing senses and carries an evaluative dimension” (The Politics of Irony in Contemporary Latin American Literature on Violence). In “Diastema,” the narrator’s initial triumphal posture (“I had to find out whether I’d be the cat that lost his life to curiosity—or if she’d purr”) is deflated into a comedic, melancholic moment. The story invites the reader to see the narrator’s self-delusion before he does, engaging the reader’s interpretive role in the ironic dynamic. Salgado thus situates his micro-narrative in a mode that is both realist in setting and post-realist in its ironic register.

Conclusion

Through the combined lenses of Lacanian psychoanalysis and ironic/realist literary theory, Wilbert Salgado’s “Diastema” emerges as a multilayered exploration of the gap between desire and recognition, projection and truth, fantasy and quotidian reality. On the psychological level, the narrator’s longing, his filling in of missing parts, his momentary recognition, and ultimate solitude reflect Lacan’s teaching that desire is built around lack and will always return to it. On the literary level, the realistic details of setting and character mask a quietly ironic structure: the narrator’s fantasy of connection dissolves into an ironic twist that reveals the self-absorption of his gaze. The titular gap is both literal and symbolic: it signals the narrator’s missing piece and his mistaken belief that another might complete him. Wilbert Salgado’s story thus invites us to consider how we narrate our own desire, how we interpret the other’s gaze, and how the most ordinary of nights can reveal the most profound of psychic fissures.


📚 References

Adriaensen, B. (2016). The politics of irony in contemporary Latin American literature on violence. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO). https://www.redvyral.com/projects/the-politics-of-irony-in-contemporary-latin-american-literature-on-violence

Lacan, J. (1988). The seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book I (1953-1954): Freud’s papers on technique (J. Forrester, Ed.). W. W. Norton.

Lacan, J. (2006). Écrits: A selection (B. Fink, Trans.). W. W. Norton.

LacanOnline.com. (2020). What does Lacan say about desire? https://www.lacanonline.com/2010/05/what-does-lacan-say-about-desire

Lozano-Palacio, I. (2019). Irony in linguistics and literary theory: Towards a synthetic approach. Miscelánea: A Journal of English and American Studies, 59, 95-115. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/360105583_Irony_in_Linguistics_and_Literary_Theory_Towards_a_synthetic_approach

Salgado, W. (2024). Diastema. [Unpublished short story].

Stasi, P. (Ed.). (2025). Realism and the novel: A global history. Cambridge University Press.

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. (2023). Jacques Lacan. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/lacan

Tel Journal. (2016). The study of desire: A Lacanian perspective. https://www.teljournal.org/article_113137

Tittler, J. (1985). Narrative irony in the contemporary Spanish-American novel. Hispania, 68(4), 851-857. https://www.academia.edu/56843752/Narrative_Irony_in_the_Contemporary_Spanish_American_Novel


Short Story: "Diastema" by Wilbert Salgado

Diastema by Wilbert Salgado by Jonathan Acuña


Reader's Handout for Salgado's Short Story: Diastema

Reader’s Handout by Jonathan Acuña



A Lacanian and Ironic Realist Reading of Wilbert Salgado’s “Diastema” by Jonathan Acuña




Saturday, November 08, 2025



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