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Mimetic Desire: Essays on Narcissism in German Literature from Romanticism to Postmodernism [Kietas viršelis]

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This important collection of essays opens new pyschological perspectives on writers such as Tieck, Goethe, Freud, Thomas Mann, Heidegger and Thomas Bernhard.

This important collection of essays opens new pyschological perspectives on writers such as Tieck, Goethe, Freud, Thomas Mann, Heidegger and Thomas Bernhard. Psychological approaches to literature have grown rapidly in the last few decades, new developments in literary psychoanalysis mirroring the reassessment of Freud in the psychoanalytic community; particularly important revisions have come both from the Lacanian school, and from the field of object relations and self-psychology. The latter studies narcissism not only as a pathological condition, but as a healthy and universal aspect of all psychological reality. Theorists such as Heinz Kohut have also suggested that the transformations of narcissism can be healthy and may contribute to the development of wisdom, humour and creativity. The articles in this volume consider the phenomenon of narcissism across a wide range of works, several reflecting the current re-evaluations of narcissism as a counter-challenge to Freudian thought and attitudes.

Reconsideration of the phenomenon of narcissism in the works of a number of important German writers.

This important collection of essays opens new pyschological perspectives on writers such as Tieck, Goethe, Freud, Thomas Mann, Heidegger and Thomas Bernhard. Psychological approaches to literature have grown rapidly in the last few decades, new developments in literary psychoanalysis mirroring the reassessment of Freud in the psychoanalytic community; particularly important revisions have come both from the Lacanian school, and from the field of object relations and self-psychology. The latter studies narcissism not only as a pathological condition, but as a healthy and universal aspect of all psychological reality. Theorists such as Heinz Kohut have also suggested that the transformations of narcissism can be healthy and may contribute to the development of wisdom, humour and creativity. The articles in this volume consider the phenomenon of narcissism across a wide range of works, several reflecting the current re-evaluations of narcissism as a counter-challenge to Freudian thought and attitudes.

Reconsideration of the phenomenon of narcissism in the works of a number of important German writers.

This important collection of essays opens new pyschological perspectives on writers such as Tieck, Goethe, Freud, Thomas Mann, Heidegger and Thomas Bernhard. Psychological approaches to literature have grown rapidly in the last few decades, new developments in literary psychoanalysis mirroring the reassessment of Freud in the psychoanalytic community; particularly important revisions have come both from the Lacanian school, and from the field of object relations and self-psychology. The latter studies narcissism not only as a pathological condition, but as a healthy and universal aspect of all psychological reality. Theorists such as Heinz Kohut have also suggested that the transformations of narcissism can be healthy and may contribute to the development of wisdom, humour and creativity. The articles in this volume consider the phenomenon of narcissism across a wide range of works, several reflecting the current re-evaluations of narcissism as a counter-challenge to Freudian thought and attitudes.

Recenzijos

. . . Contains several excellent, detailed psychological studies of German literature from the Romantics to more contemporary writers. Recommended to all scholars interested in psychoanalytic approaches to German literature. * COLLOQUIA GERMANICA *

Narcissism and creativity - Jean Paul's "Flegeljahre", Wulf Koepke;
Heidegger's pathological narcissism and his philosophy, Richard Chessick;
narcissism in Thomas Mann's "Lotte in Weimar", Peter Heller; empathy and self
in Christa Wolf's "Christa T.", J. Brooks Bouson; Freud and Arnold Zweig,
Carole Stone; narcissism and object relations in Goethe's creative
imagination, Jeffrey Adams; Thomas Bernhard - narcissistic alliances and the
talking cure, Francis Michael Sharp; the healing of a narcissist in Gottfried
Benn's novella "Der Ptolemaeer", Oskar Sahlberg; the Gorgon's gaze in Tieck's
"Runenberg", Alice Kuzniar; pony-tales and incest in Max Frishch's "Montauk",
Eric Williams.