American social critics in the 1970s, convinced that their
nation was in decline, turned to psychoanalysis for answers and
seized on narcissism as the sickness of the age. Books indicting
Americans as greedy, shallow, and self-indulgent appeared, none
more influential than Christopher Lasch's famous 1978 jeremiad "The
Culture of Narcissism." This line of critique reached a crescendo
the following year in Jimmy Carter's "malaise speech" and has
endured to this day.
But as Elizabeth Lunbeck reveals, the American critics missed
altogether the breakthrough in psychoanalytic thinking that was
championing narcissism's positive aspects. Psychoanalysts had
clashed over narcissism from the moment Freud introduced it in
1914, and they had long been split on its defining aspects: How
much self-love, self-esteem, and self-indulgence was normal and
desirable? While Freud's orthodox followers sided with asceticism,
analytic dissenters argued for gratification. Fifty years later,
the Viennese emigre Heinz Kohut led a psychoanalytic revolution
centered on a "normal narcissism" that he claimed was the
wellspring of human ambition, creativity, and empathy. But critics
saw only pathology in narcissism. The result was the loss of a
vital way to understand ourselves, our needs, and our desires.
Narcissism's rich and complex history is also the history of
the shifting fortunes and powerful influence of psychoanalysis in
American thought and culture. Telling this story, The
Americanization of Narcissism" ultimately opens a new view on the
central questions faced by the self struggling amid the tumultuous
crosscurrents of modernity."
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