The nineteenth-century novels of Herman Melville, in their exploration of the theme of the conflict of man\u27s godlike aspirations with his all-too-human limitations, anticipate the twentieth-century psychoanalytic understanding of narcissism, as developed by Sigmund Freud and Hans Kohut, specifically its psychodynamic model of the ego ideal in conflict with reality and the finiteness of human life. Captain Ahab in Moby-Dick is a vivid portrait of a narcissistic character, while Captain Vere in Billy Budd stands as a model of the transformations of narcissism in a mature individual. Melville\u27s imaginative fiction is still capable of giving us valuable insights into the human condition
principal aim of this thesis is to reconstruct part of the literary experience of mental illness dur...
There are some ways to express ideas, especially in a literary work. A novel talks about human activ...
The contribution of psychoanalysis to marketing theory does not need to come from putting consumers ...
Incidents of violence abound in most of the novels and short stories of Herman Melville, and in seve...
Jerome David Salinger´s Holden Caulfield, the protagonist in The Catcher in the Rye, is seen through...
Mardi, Moby-Dick, and Pierre share striking parallels in form and content: each is narrated by an in...
The purpose of this essay is to perform a comparative psychoanalytic reading of The Great Gatsby (19...
Psycho-biographical study of Hemingway’s major protagonists as extensions of himself to reveal the e...
This study critically analyses the character of Hamlet using two differing interpretations of the pl...
A Thesis Submitted In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Master of Arts-Engli...
[Introduction] What’s eating moody Ahab? In Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, Ahab is obsessed with hunti...
Two facets of the Narcissus myth are reflected in contemporary Canadian fiction: Narcissus and his f...
In Narcissus Transformed, Gray Kochhar-Lindgren interprets Narcissus as thematizing the tragic situa...
Herman Melville (1819-1891) lived during the height of the Romantic period in literature. Because he...
This thesis project positions itself as a close examination of Herman Melville\u27s novel, Moby Dick...
principal aim of this thesis is to reconstruct part of the literary experience of mental illness dur...
There are some ways to express ideas, especially in a literary work. A novel talks about human activ...
The contribution of psychoanalysis to marketing theory does not need to come from putting consumers ...
Incidents of violence abound in most of the novels and short stories of Herman Melville, and in seve...
Jerome David Salinger´s Holden Caulfield, the protagonist in The Catcher in the Rye, is seen through...
Mardi, Moby-Dick, and Pierre share striking parallels in form and content: each is narrated by an in...
The purpose of this essay is to perform a comparative psychoanalytic reading of The Great Gatsby (19...
Psycho-biographical study of Hemingway’s major protagonists as extensions of himself to reveal the e...
This study critically analyses the character of Hamlet using two differing interpretations of the pl...
A Thesis Submitted In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Master of Arts-Engli...
[Introduction] What’s eating moody Ahab? In Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, Ahab is obsessed with hunti...
Two facets of the Narcissus myth are reflected in contemporary Canadian fiction: Narcissus and his f...
In Narcissus Transformed, Gray Kochhar-Lindgren interprets Narcissus as thematizing the tragic situa...
Herman Melville (1819-1891) lived during the height of the Romantic period in literature. Because he...
This thesis project positions itself as a close examination of Herman Melville\u27s novel, Moby Dick...
principal aim of this thesis is to reconstruct part of the literary experience of mental illness dur...
There are some ways to express ideas, especially in a literary work. A novel talks about human activ...
The contribution of psychoanalysis to marketing theory does not need to come from putting consumers ...