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. |
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Page xi
... both for their financial support and for their insights . And I am deeply grateful to the Robert J. Stoller Foundation and to Sybil Stoller for financial and symbolic support . The work of Robert Stoller is xi Acknowledgments.
... both for their financial support and for their insights . And I am deeply grateful to the Robert J. Stoller Foundation and to Sybil Stoller for financial and symbolic support . The work of Robert Stoller is xi Acknowledgments.
Page xii
Psychoanalysis and the Mirror of Manhood Carl P. Eby. and symbolic support . The work of Robert Stoller is the founda- tion upon which this book has been built . I want to thank my friends for remaining my friends when I could speak ...
Psychoanalysis and the Mirror of Manhood Carl P. Eby. and symbolic support . The work of Robert Stoller is the founda- tion upon which this book has been built . I want to thank my friends for remaining my friends when I could speak ...
Page 3
... symbolic , and structural concerns that are of tremen- dous importance to any understanding of Hemingway's fiction . For the past two decades , Hemingway criticism has been dominated by a reconsideration of the role of gender in his ...
... symbolic , and structural concerns that are of tremen- dous importance to any understanding of Hemingway's fiction . For the past two decades , Hemingway criticism has been dominated by a reconsideration of the role of gender in his ...
Page 13
... symbolic father . In my final chapter , using The Garden of Eden and some material sliced out of the manuscript to Islands in the Stream , I address the vexed issue of the relation between perversion , pornography , and creativity ...
... symbolic father . In my final chapter , using The Garden of Eden and some material sliced out of the manuscript to Islands in the Stream , I address the vexed issue of the relation between perversion , pornography , and creativity ...
Page 22
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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 | |
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Hemingway's Fetishism: Psychoanalysis and the Mirror of Manhood Carl P. Eby No preview available - 1998 |
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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.