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Antinarcissism was first introduced by
Francis Pasche in 1964 within the theoretical debate that initially sought out to define narcissism and describe its role in psychic development. Pasche described the concept as a centrifugal investment, in which the subject tends to be divested of self, to give
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similarly wrote of antinarcissism as a negative narcissism that seeks self-destructively to abolish the ego in its "aspiration for nothingness". This is part of his notion of dual narcissism, which is likely to be mapped onto the irreducible dualism of life and death drives, opposing the concept of
91:– an alien standard to live up to – as opposed to developing their own selves. There is also a concept called Antinarcissistic Rhetoric, which pertains to the way women use rhetors to appropriate patriarchal discourses for the purpose of creating ethos with their audience.
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earlier described antinarcissism as the tendency of two lovers to lose themselves each in the other. He explained that the essence of love is identification and that each become conscious only in and through one another.
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introduced the concept of antinarcissism to describe a self-limiting kind of narcissist who refuses to develop themselves or use their talents, so as to maintain their exaggerated sense of self-importance
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positive narcissism, which aims to reach unity, and negative narcissism, one that strives toward the zero level and aims at nothingness. Green's concept is akin to
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Fredlund, Katherine (2014-01-02). "Antinarcissistic
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the ego, restricts its scope without diminishing the amount of self-investment involved. It is seen in the
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up their own substance and reserves of love, independent of any economic factors.
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The
Individual and Utopia: A Multidisciplinary Study of Humanity and Perfection
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saw antinarcissism as the female internalisation of the
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Narcissism, Melancholia and the
Subject of Community
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382:Psychoanalytic terminology
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