Abstract

ABSTRACTThis article explores the myth of Narcissus as told by Ovid. The author examines why one scene in the story became the focus for the term ‘narcissism’, which has been extrapolated to become a theoretical concept as well a diagnosis. Closer reading of the myth suggests this may have been a distortion. Narcissus as a mythological figure may tell us more about late male adolescence than we have given him credit for. Freud’s paper ‘On Narcissism’ is contrasted with Jung’s views on libido. One legacy of the way in which Freud conceptualized narcissism was to pathologize the development of gay men and women. Two cases are presented to show an alternative understanding of sexual development for young men in mid and late adolescence. The author proposes that a dawning awareness of feminine aspects of sexuality can be experienced as a kind of potentially harmful ‘flowering’, about which young men can feel considerable shame and anxiety.

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