User:Jahsonic/Poe's impotence  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

< User:Jahsonic(Redirected from Poe's impotence)
Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Somewhat of a surprise was waiting when I finally held all 700+ pages of Marie Bonaparte's The Life and Works of E. A. Poe: a Psychoanalytic Interpretation in my hands and skipped to the psychoanalytical interpretation of Edgar Allan Poe's short story "Loss of Breath."

There, on page 373, Marie Bonaparte utters what any man dreads to hear: "You are impotent, you have limp cock, you cannot get it up." Ouch. Poe must have turned in his grave when he heard of his post-mortem psychobiography and Bonaparte's concern with his vita sexualis.

In "Loss of Breath", my favourite Poe story, Marie Bonaparte finds the ultimate proof of Poe's impotence. She equates the breath of Mr. Lackobreath, the sorry protagonist of the tale, with "pneuma," "life force," hence "sexual potency."

To strengthen her argument, she cites Baudelaire who once said "There is not in all of Poe's work a single passage that tends to lubricity or even to sensual pleasure".

Not only was Poe impotent, according to Marie Bonaparte, his art in general was the product of neurosis. Poe was a "repressed sado-masochist and necrophilist" (299), she adds.

Illustration: photo of a silicone packer[1] by Canadaworker from Wikimedia Commons.

See also my two previous two odes to the flaccid phallus, the limp male member: Un priape marchant sur des pattes de coq[2] and votive phallus[3].



Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Jahsonic/Poe's impotence" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools