"Gloss and glitter create a grandiose pact against reality. With her rare combination of keen analytic sensitivity, cultural erudition, and literary eloquence, Kogan explores in this powerfully engaging study the many ways a self strives to extinguish anguish by being as if a master of the universe, doing so regardless of the price. Studying the works of creative artists of different genres with applied analysis at its disciplined best, exploring works her own readers can experience first hand for themselves, Kogan adds new insight to our understanding of the struggles of a tortured self. And she does it all in writing that is a delight to read."
Warren S. Poland, author Intimacy and Separateness in Psychoanalysis
"This book by Ilany Kogan is a masterful example of applied psychoanalysis. The author explores the nucleus of those narcissistic fantasies of omnipotence and immortality which every human being harbours, for the promise and the need to repudiate limits and death. Combining the rigor and depth of her analytic research with her love of art, Kogan embarks on an exploration which goes from individuals to the community, to entire nations as they are enthralled by political personalities who incarnate such fantasies.
The result of this impassioned research is an original, unique, and thoroughly current book, thanks also to its handling of new technologies, which fuel an illusion of omnipotence.
Alternating between rigorous theory and examples taken from the world of art make it a pleasant, refreshing read, and will be of interest to specialists and a broad public. It leaves us with a disturbing question: are we -- all of us -- not chasing after pleasure, just like the narcissist, in a way which leaves us incapable of resisting the temptation of feeling, even if just for a moment, the privileges of divinity?"
Paola Golinelli, Training Analyst of the Italian Psychoanalytic Society and co-editor of Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Virtual Intimacy and Communication in Film
"This book illustrates various aspects of narcissistic personality by means of studying fictional characters in films, literature, musical dramas and television series in a compelling and thoughtful example of applied psychoanalysis. There is another important reason for reading this book. Massive migrations, terrorism and changes at an unprecedented pace and scale in our present world lead to searches for political leaders with exaggerated narcissism. This book provides an analytic understanding of such searches. It is very timely."
Vamk D. Volkan, M. D., Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry, University of Virginia and author of Enemies on the Couch: A Psychopolitical Journey Through War and Peace