Phallic woman

In psychoanalysis, phallic woman is a concept to describe a woman with the symbolic attributes of the phallus. More generally, it describes any woman possessing traditionally masculine characteristics.[1]

Phallic mother

Freud considered that at the phallic stage of early childhood development children of both sexes attribute possession of a penis to the mother—a belief the loss of which helps precipitate the castration complex.[2] Therefter males may seek fetishistic subtitutes in women for the lost penis in the form of high heels, earings or long hair to alleviate the castrative threat[3]—terrifying phallic women such as witches (with their broomsticks) representing the failure of such substitutes to cover the underlying anxiety.[4] The female, whose love (in Freud's view) was originally "directed to her phallic mother",[5] may thereafter either turn to her father for love, or may return to an identification with the original phallic mother in a neurotic development.[6]

The phallic mother can be (though need not necessarily be) an actively castrative figure, stifling her children by pre-empting all room for autonomous action.[7] The Nineties New Man has been seen as covertly ceding the locus of action to the phallic mother.[8]

Phallus girl

Rather than seeking or identifying with the phallic mother, libido may instead be directed at the figure that has been termed the phallus-girl.[9] For the male, the phallus girl may be represented by a younger (perhaps boyish) girl, in whom he can find an image of his own adolescent self.[10] For the female, such a position may either entail a submissive merger with the male partner (identification with a body-part),[11] or an exhibitionist display of the self as phallus: as Ella Sharpe put it of a dancer, "she was the magical phallus. The dancing was in her".[12]

Soft porn marks out the phallus girl through such symbols as whips, bikes and guns;[13] while she also underpins the action heroine such as Ripley or Lara Croft.[14]

Later developments

The twenty-first century ladette can be seen as a phallic girl—her emphasis on light-hearted, recreational sex serving as a passport to being 'one of the boys'.[15]

Artistic analogues

See also

References

  1. B. Creed, The Monstrous-Feminine (2012) p. 157
  2. S. Freud, On Sexuality (PFL 7) p. 310-11
  3. E. A. Kaplan, Rocking Around the Clock (1991) p. 91
  4. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 330 and p. 341
  5. S. Freud, New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis (PFL 2) p. 160
  6. M. Borch-Jacobsen, Lacan (1991) p. 215
  7. M. Parsons, The Dove that Returns, the Dove that Vanishes (2000) p. 109
  8. Marina Warner, Signs and Wonders (2003) p. 149
  9. J. Mitchell/J. Rose eds., Feminine Sexuality (1982) p. 94
  10. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 332-3
  11. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 350
  12. Quoted in M. Jacobus, The Poetics of Psychoanalysis (2005) p. 29
  13. B. Creed, The Monstrous-Feminine (2012) p. 116
  14. M. Mark, Divas on Screen (2004) p. 68
  15. A. McRobbie, The Aftermath of Feminism (2009) p. 83
  16. R. Penrose ed., Picasso 1881/1973 (1973) p. 91-4
  17. J. Davidson, The Psychology of Joss Whedon (2013) p. 107

Further Reading

External links

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