This book aims to wrest the concept of narcissism from its common and pejorative meanings egoism and vanityby revealing its complexity and importance. DeArmitt undertakes the work of rehabilitating narcissism by patiently reexamining the terms and figures that have been associated with it, especially in the writings of Rousseau, Kristeva, and Derrida.
These thinkers are known for incisively exposing a certain (traditional) narcissism that has been operative in Western thought and culture and for revealing the violence it has wrought from the dangers of amour-propre and the pathology of a collective ones own to the phantasm of the sovereign One. Nonetheless, each of these thinkers denounces the naive denunciation of narcissism, as the dangers of a non-negotiation with narcissism are more perilous. By rethinking narcissism as a complex structure of self-relation through the Other, the book reveals the necessity of an im-possible self-love.
Deftly working at the intersection of philosophy, psychoanalysis, and literature, DeArmitt makes a fascinating case for self-love, or narcissism. With subtle and incisive readings of Rousseau, Kristeva and Derrida, DeArmitt shows the necessity for rethinking narcissism as an ethics of otherness.A fascinating book. . . highly recommend.Through an engagement with the writings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Julia Kristeva, and Jacques Derrida, this book argues for a rethinking of the concept of narcissism and aims to wrest it from its common and pejorative meanings, egoism and vanity, revealing the complexity and importance of this notion.Pleshette DeArmitt's gem of a book, The Right to Narcissism, makes a cogent, timely, and well-crafted case in support of reclaiming the concept of narcissism from the pejorative meanings with which it has most commonly been associated for much of the modern era.