Eros in a narcissistic culture : an analysis anchored in the life-world
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Eros in a narcissistic culture : an analysis anchored in the life-world
(Contributions to phenomenology, v. 22)
Kluwer Academic, c1996
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 275-280) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Urgency of Changing Our Thinking about Eros In Atlanta recently, a man broke into the apartment of his former girlfriend and brutally murdered both her and her new lover with an axe. When asked later whether he had considered the consequences of being apprehended and prosecuted, he responded that without his relationship to this particular woman his life had no meaning, and for this reason it made no difference what happened to him. All-too-facile explanations of such events can be devised in terms of neurological imbalances or improper child-rearing practices. But why are suicide, the murder of spouses and lovers, and other crimes of passion so much more prevalent in advanced, urban-industrial cultures, and especially in those where people's value is assessed in terms of socio-economic success and failure? And why do the associated psychic disturbances express themselves so prominently in terms of disruption of attitudes toward love relationships? It cannot be a mere coincidence that the most heinous crimes are crimes of love. I shall suggest here that the most direct way to understand the most prevalent dysfunctions of the modern psyche is to understand the dysfunctions of eros. The reason for this is twofold. First, eros is central tQl the project of defining meaning for conscious beings - for reasons more fundamentally philosophical than anything envisioned by Freud or other drive-reduction theorists.
Table of Contents
Introduction. The Urgency of Changing Our Thinking about Eros. Part I: A Phenomenology of the Experience of Eros. 1. Eros as Transformation. 2. After the Awakening. 3. Sexuality and Infatuation. 4. Fear of Eros and the Fragmentation of Consciousness. Part II: Eros in Its Broader Existential and Cultural Context. 5. The Destruction of Eros. 6. The Obsession with Eros as Pointing beyond Itself. 7. Eros and the Value of Being. Conclusion. References. Index.
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