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The figure of Narcissus, literally falling for himself, has profoundly influenced Western philosophy and literary theory: he signifies transcendental idealism and its nemesis, vanity; he underlies autoeroticism and misogyny; he has a crucial place in poststructuralist French thought. Yet, for all this, Narcissus is rarely if ever seen in his primary attitudeas a man erotically desiring another man. In Reflecting Narcissus, Steven Bruhm traces the complex uses of Narcissus in cultural and aesthetic formulations from the eighteenth century to the present and returns Narcissuss essential homoeroticism to a central place in this history. Extending the horizons of queer, feminist, and psychoanalytic theory, this book challenges the twentieth centurys predominant understanding of narcissismand the predominantly narcissistic qualities of male same-sex desireas allegedly solipsistic, immature, sterile, antisocial, and apolitical. Bruhm argues that Narcissus has, instead, served to trouble the very cultural and gendered norms that define him. While aesthetic theories since Romanticism and before have exploited the desiring gaze of Narcissus, they simultaneously deny his homoeroticism. And yet, Bruhm argues, these aesthetics depend on the very queerness they silence, instilling a vagueand consequential-discomfort about a homosexual Narcissus in discourses from Neoplatonism and psychoanalysis to that of queer cultural production itself. Our culture, Bruhm contends, mutes the narcissistic eros that it paradoxically depends on for the work of introspection. He unravels this problem in texts from Oscar Wildes Picture of Dorian Gray to Vladimir Nabokovs Pale Fire, from Tennessee Williamss Suddenly Last Summer to Peter Straubs Ghost Story, from Schlegels sonnets to pornography and the gothic, from Decadence to French feminism, from Symbolism to psychoanalysis. This book reveals how Narcissus, while generating representations of creative masculinity, destabilizes them at the same timeoffering us an exciting new purchase on phallocentric identity, its art, and its politics.
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The figure of Narcissus, literally falling for himself, has profoundly influenced Western philosophy and literary theory: he signifies transcendental idealism and its nemesis, vanity; he underlies autoeroticism and misogyny; he has a crucial place in poststructuralist French thought. Yet, for all this, Narcissus is rarely if ever seen in his primary attitudeas a man erotically desiring another man. In Reflecting Narcissus, Steven Bruhm traces the complex uses of Narcissus in cultural and aesthetic formulations from the eighteenth century to the present and returns Narcissuss essential homoeroticism to a central place in this history. Extending the horizons of queer, feminist, and psychoanalytic theory, this book challenges the twentieth centurys predominant understanding of narcissismand the predominantly narcissistic qualities of male same-sex desireas allegedly solipsistic, immature, sterile, antisocial, and apolitical. Bruhm argues that Narcissus has, instead, served to trouble the very cultural and gendered norms that define him. While aesthetic theories since Romanticism and before have exploited the desiring gaze of Narcissus, they simultaneously deny his homoeroticism. And yet, Bruhm argues, these aesthetics depend on the very queerness they silence, instilling a vagueand consequential-discomfort about a homosexual Narcissus in discourses from Neoplatonism and psychoanalysis to that of queer cultural production itself. Our culture, Bruhm contends, mutes the narcissistic eros that it paradoxically depends on for the work of introspection. He unravels this problem in texts from Oscar Wildes Picture of Dorian Gray to Vladimir Nabokovs Pale Fire, from Tennessee Williamss Suddenly Last Summer to Peter Straubs Ghost Story, from Schlegels sonnets to pornography and the gothic, from Decadence to French feminism, from Symbolism to psychoanalysis. This book reveals how Narcissus, while generating representations of creative masculinity, destabilizes them at the same timeoffering us an exciting new purchase on phallocentric identity, its art, and its politics.