Hemingway's Fetishism: Psychoanalysis and the Mirror of ManhoodIn Hemingway's Fetishism, Carl Eby demonstrates in painstaking detail and with stunning new archival evidence how fetishism was crucial to the construction and negotiation of identity and gender in both Hemingway's life and his fiction. Critics have long acknowledged Hemingway's lifelong erotic obsession with hair, but this book is the first to explain in a theoretically coherent manner why Hemingway was a fetishist and why we should care. Without reducing Hemingway's art to his psychosexuality, Eby demonstrates that when the fetish appears in Hemingway's fiction, it always does so with a retinue of attendant fantasies, themes, and symbols that are among the most prominent and important in Hemingway's work. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 34
Page 2
... appear crude only when the love relationships are reduced to them . Put sim- ply , I make no attempt to describe the love relationships in their totality , and I stress the psychosexuality at work in these rela- tionships not because I ...
... appear crude only when the love relationships are reduced to them . Put sim- ply , I make no attempt to describe the love relationships in their totality , and I stress the psychosexuality at work in these rela- tionships not because I ...
Page 8
... appears in everyone's sexuality — for instance in the form of a gentlemanly preference for blondes . Millions of people pay far too much attention to shoes and to hair , and this attention must often , if not always , partake of an ...
... appears in everyone's sexuality — for instance in the form of a gentlemanly preference for blondes . Millions of people pay far too much attention to shoes and to hair , and this attention must often , if not always , partake of an ...
Page 10
... appears in his fiction with a retinue of attendant fantasies , themes , and symbols that are among the most prominent and important in his oeuvre . These are the ambassadors of his core complex to the realm of fantasy . To define what I ...
... appears in his fiction with a retinue of attendant fantasies , themes , and symbols that are among the most prominent and important in his oeuvre . These are the ambassadors of his core complex to the realm of fantasy . To define what I ...
Page 13
... appears in the night . The shades of The Garden of Eden are impossible to deny , but more importantly , a recognition of the split in Hem- ingway's ego demands a rethinking of traditional critiques of his female characters , for on some ...
... appears in the night . The shades of The Garden of Eden are impossible to deny , but more importantly , a recognition of the split in Hem- ingway's ego demands a rethinking of traditional critiques of his female characters , for on some ...
Page 23
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Contents
The Core Complex and the Field of Fetishistic Fantasy | 15 |
Freud Fetishism and Hemingways Phallic Women | 41 |
Biography PostFreudian Theory and Beyond the Phallus | 87 |
Loss Fetishism and the Fate of the Transitional Object | 119 |
Ebony and Ivory Hemingways Fetishization of Race | 155 |
Bisexuality Splitting and the Mirror of Manhood | 185 |
Perversion Pornography and Creativity | 241 |
Notes | 277 |
335 | |
349 | |
Other editions - View all
Hemingway's Fetishism: Psychoanalysis and the Mirror of Manhood Carl P. Eby No preview available - 1998 |
Common terms and phrases
African Baker Barbara Sheldon beautiful Bell Tolls blonde Bourne's breasts Cantwell Cantwell's castration anxiety Catherine Barkley Catherine Bourne Catherine's chapter clothes Comley and Scholes cross-dressing Custer dark David Bourne depression disavowal dream dress emphasis Ernest Hemingway erotic explains fantasy Farewell to Arms father feel fetish object fetishist Frederic Freud Garden Garden of Eden gender identity genitals girl Grace Greenacre Hadley haircut Heming Hemingway's fetishism Hemingway's fiction homeovestic Hudson idealized paternal identification ingway ingway's ivory Jake Kennedy Library letter little boy look Lynn male manuscript Marcelline Marita Mary Hemingway masculinity mirror mother narcissistic never Nick night novel oedipal paternal phallus Pauline penis perverse phallic woman phallus Pilar play pornography psychoanalytic rabbit Renata Robert Jordan Robert Stoller sexual sister sort Spilka Stoller story suggests Sun Also Rises symbolic tells things tion transitional object transvestic transvestite twin way's wear wife women York young
Popular passages
Page 9 - Vice is a monster of so frightful mien, As, to be hated, needs but to be seen; Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face, We first endure, then pity, then embrace.