ABSTRACT

This book has grown from a belief that the psychoanalytic exploration of literature and performances leads to a richer and fuller understanding of each individual’s internal reality. It includes an exploration of narcissistic fantasies from various protagonists of film and novels and focuses on the fantasy of the omnipotence of the self, which is a predominantly narcissistic desire to be a "Master of the Universe", a deity, an omnipotent, immortal figure.

Psychoanalysis and art interact in exploring the individual's refusal to give up grandiose fantasies about the self, or his inability to modulate and integrate them within his personality, which are at the origin of his wish to transcend the human condition. These narcissistic fantasies are often expressed through aggressive and self-destructive behaviour, including flirtation with death and destruction. The emotional truth that great artists convey through symbols which often resonates in the audience is examined in this book through studies and comparisons of narcissistic characters in opera, film and contemporary fiction. Identifying with these figures, who place themselves above the law, may give us the illusion of omnipotence and immortality, which corresponds to a primary narcissistic fantasy, the traces of which exist in various degrees in all of us.

Part of the popular International Psychoanalytical Association Psychoanalytic Ideas and Applications Series, this book is unique in its focus on the narcissistic fantasy of the omnipotence of the self by means of an analysis of a variety of protagonists from the worlds of the performing arts and literature, and on the exploration of their impact on the audience. It will be of interest to psychoanalysts, therapists, and those with an interest in the intersection of psychoanalytic theory with film and literature.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part 1|11 pages

Theoretical discussion

chapter Chapter 1|9 pages

Revisiting narcissistic character disorder

part 2|15 pages

Musical drama

chapter Chapter 2|13 pages

Master of the ring

The fight for supremacy in Wagner’s Der Ring Des Nibelungen (1848–1872)

part 3|50 pages

Films and fiction

chapter Chapter 3|16 pages

The gods of Wall Street

Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) through a psychoanalytic lens

chapter Chapter 4|20 pages

The gods of the digital world

Spike Jonze’s Movie Her (2013): computer therapy and the psychoanalytic setting

chapter Chapter 5|12 pages

Omnipotence and the necrophilic fantasy

Craig Gillespie’s Lars and the Real Girl (2007) and Ian McEwan’s short story Dead as They Come (2006): a psychoanalytic examination

part 4|20 pages

TV drama and fiction

chapter Chapter 6|18 pages

Lord of the criminal world

Vince Gilligan’s television series Breaking Bad (2008–2013) and Anton Pavlovich Chekhov’s novella The Duel (1891): transformation of personality: deformation and reformation in confronting death

part 5|45 pages

Fiction

chapter Chapter 7|13 pages

A fatal attraction to death

Some reflections on Ian McEwan’s The Comfort of Strangers (1981)

chapter Chapter 8|17 pages

God and the novelist

The purpose of creative writing in Ian McEwan’s Atonement (2001)

chapter Chapter 9|12 pages

Saviour of the universe

Ian McEwan’s Solar (2010) through a psychoanalytic lens

chapter |1 pages

Final words