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Session 2: Erotic, Culture and the
Self Manipulative Romances or Bringing Women Back
Home Whether mainly sexual or sentimental, the erotic
novel deals with sexual relationships, including family and friendship
and therefore addresses readers with female psyche. Narcissism and Eroticism My aim is to examine the eroticism of women with the help of Lou Andreas Salomé’s theory of narcissism. My understanding is, that feminist theories of narcissism differ definitely from traditional psychoanalytic views on self and narcissism. According to Irigaray, the woman finds her own place by crossing (like Alice ) through the mirror, as she does not reflect the femininity-image projected by the patriarchal system. This kind of mirroring can be explained with the help of Salome’s Eroticism, where she suggested that eroticism was sexualized from the energies of early narcissism cathected by the ego. To prove this, I refer to the self-theories of Heinz Kohut, who calls the reworking of early narcissism in the analytical relationship a mirror-transfer where the self reconstructs itself in a mirrored representation. The mirror-stage concept of Lacan is understood as a phase of development, where the subject turns into a social-ego by the means of a paranoid alienation after the confrontation with its two-dimensional image reflected in the mirror. The mother-mirror mechanism originates from an early stage of narcissism. It is a question, where the subject and the mother are separated, that is, at what point narcissism is formed without a mother-connection. The eroticism of women differs definitely from that of the men’s. According to Freud, autoerotism is hidden behind of object-love, while Irigaray believes that it is hidden behind the narcissistic mirror of the feminine. This is a crucial difference, for the first places the libido outside, the second keeps it in itself. All this urge the separation of feminine and masculine history, the understanding of the textualization of feminine body, the definition of eroticism as a kind of writing. Power, Pleasure and Performativity in Chick-Lit’s
New Literary Heroines Within the framework of Chick-lit, the sub-genre
which has proved most successful is the column-turned-novel. The two
best-known in the sub-genre (or super-genre) are Bridget Jones’s
Diary (1996)
and Sex and theCity (1997). Sohn’s novel Run
Catch Kiss (1999) draws together some of the elements that have
been integral to the success of Sex and the City and Bridget
Jones’s Diary : Like Bridget Jones, Run Catch Kiss’s
narrator, Ariel Steiner, is self deprecating and kooky; like Carrie
Bradshaw, Ariel is a columnist whose reputation depends on how well
she transcribes her sexual adventures. Its distinguishing feature
is that Run Catch Kiss is both more sexually explicit and
more ambiguous in its negotiations with feminine desires. |
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