Narcissism and the Literary Libido. Marshall W. Alcorn Jr.

Narcissism and the Literary Libido - Marshall W. Alcorn Jr.


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(erotic cathexis) and attachments based on ego need (narcissistic cathexis). See Sigmund Freud, “Mourning and Melancholia” (1917), The Standard Edition 14: 249. According to Freud, the subject has an original libidinal investment in itself that is later transformed and invested in objects. Freud’s distinction is clearly an oversimplification of the mechanisms involved, but it does seem to have merit. Both Kohut and Kernberg are very persuasive in their analysis of such distinctions operating in analysis. Texts, however, do not offer the same concrete access to experience as analysis. For this reason I have not attempted to consistently work with this distinction. There are moments when I feel secure about describing an investment in terms of narcissistic as opposed to sexual libido, but for the most part I use only the term libido and emphasize the similarities rather than the differences between these two modes of cathexes.

      psychosexual urges and wishes propel experience and behavior, and one’s sense of self is derivative of the expression of these underlying motives. Various authors from different traditions have turned this causal sequence around, arguing that the maintenance of a sense of identity and continuity is the most pressing human concern and that sexual experiences often derive their meaning and intensity by lending themselves to this project. (99)

      Some theorists want to make all examples of libidinal investment examples of object seeking behavior. Other theorists, however, see all examples of attachment as expressions of self-identity. I must admit that I can neither synthesize these two views nor choose between them. In the example of the blonde by the car I would not want to insist that, for heterosexual men, biology plays no role in “determining” the woman’s appeal as an example of “object libido.” I would, however, insist that glamour, which shapes sexual experience, is heavily determined by our culturally conditioned response to details—clothes, poise, body image, hair color—fashioned by dominant social value. These details—examples I presume of “narcissistic libido”—undoubtedly provide cues for sexual arousal.


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