Erotogenic Zone
EROTOGENIC ZONE
Any part of the body susceptible of becoming excited, of being a seat of pleasure, is an erotogenic zone. Freud nevertheless used the term to refer primarily to a number of specific areas, notably, the genitals, mouth, and anus. These zones he saw as locations of particular instincts known as "component instincts." In neurosis, on his account, nongenital erotogenic zones come to function as substitutes for the genitals. The idea of erotogenic zones was inseparable from the theory of libidinal stages, each of which, at a certain age, is fixed upon a particular zone.
Freud found support in the work of the pediatrician S. Lindner for his assertion that the child pursues the kind of sucking that develops anaclitically from feeding at the breast, for the pleasure obtained from excitation of the oral erotogenic zone. "The child's lips, in our view, behave like an erotogenic zone, and no doubt stimulation by the warm flow of milk is the cause of the pleasurable sensation" (1905d, p. 181). Sexual activity centered on an erotogenic zone rests first on its utility for self-preservation but is subsequently repeated independently of that function. Erotogenic zones are thus seen as the source of the sexual instinct, its place of origin, and (for the appropriate instinct) its place of residence.
Freud nevertheless broadened his definition of an erotogenic zone well beyond its original link with a bodily function, noting that "any other part of the skin or mucous membrane can take over the functions of an erotogenic zone, and must therefore have some aptitude in that direction" (1905d, p. 183). An area may be affected by chance as the child explores the body and discovers its potential for pleasure through an association with the simultaneous pleasure of sucking. For the adult who represses the sexual nature of the genitals, this opens up the regressive possibility of instating any part of the body as an erotogenic zone. In this case, hysterogenic zones present the same characteristics as erotogenic ones.
How is pleasure produced at the level of the erotogenic zone? The pressure of the need for satisfaction, which is of central origin, is projected outward, stimulating a peripheral erotogenic zone, whose manipulation, in a manner analogous to sucking on the breast, relieves the feelings aroused and so generates satisfaction. The erotogenic zone may also be stimulated directly, in which case it by itself creates a need, which, to be satisfied, calls for further stimulation of the zone in question.
Each particular erotogenic zone (the mouth, anus, genital organs) is wedded to a habitual stimulation
that will vary according to the life stage reached. Like the labial zone before it, the anal zone is eroticized by means of an anaclitic dependence on a corresponding bodily function, in this case excretion. The genital zone (the penis in the case of a boy, the clitoris in that of a girl) first becomes erotogenic through an anaclitic relationship with the function of micturition, the first sexual excitation of this zone constituting the point of departure for a normal sexual life. Freud (1908b) associated specific character types with adult fixations on the erotogenic nature of this or that zone.
The sexual life of early childhood is not confined to the stimulation of erotogenic zones, for so-called component instincts can emerge independently of those zones. The instinct to see and be seen, even though it is not autoerotic in nature and calls for an outside object, may turn the eye into the equivalent of an erotogenic zone. Likewise, the cruelty component of the sexual instinct, which seems at first even more independent of the erotogenic zones, is in fact linked to the instinct for mastery and to the musculature. By contrast, the skin of the buttocks, because of the chastisements it so often receives, can easily become an erotogenic zone and the site of passive masochistic pleasure.
With the introduction of narcissism, Freud added an important dimension to the theory of erotogenic zones by joining it with the ego-libido: "We can decide to regard erotogenicity as a general characteristic of all organs and may then speak of an increase or decrease of it in a particular part of the body. For every such change in the erotogenicity of the organs there might then be a parallel change of libidinal cathexis in the ego" (1914c, p. 84). The withdrawal of libido into the ego and the libido's cathexis of organs, as erotogenic zones now become painful and sensitive, may be thought to underlie hypochondria, and in such cases of hypochondria, health can be restored only by redeploying libido to objects external to the subject's own body.
The erotism aroused in these zones is essentially polymorphous in the young child. Save in the case of perversion, the child's erotism is later unified under the primacy of the genital zone, but the fate of this infantile sexuality varies: repressions, reaction-formations, and sublimations come into play as ways of dealing with the excitations emanating from the erotogenic zones, excitations that are normally unusable, or largely unusable, for the adult. In such cases, the instinctual object of the drive is often modified. Sándor Ferenczi (1916) showed, for instance, that an interest in money was founded on the anal erotogenic zone and the possibility of establishing a symbolic link between feces and money.
In this light, and in view of the potentially infinite number of transformations of instincts deriving from the erotogenic zones, it is fair to say that any form of human activity might be attributable to erotogenic sources. The psychoanalytic theory of the erotogenic zones appears to fall under the rubric of autoerotism, for it is the component instincts, independent of these zones, that are said to be directed straight at the object. Yet, as has often been pointed out, it would seem impossible to dissociate the emergence of these multiple erotogenic zones from pleasure-generating encounters with the object, especially in the context of maternal care.
It is worth mentioning that theorists since Freud have considered other erotogenic zones, such as those that affect the functions of respiration and hearing.
Sophie de Mijolla-Mellor
See also: Anaclisis/anaclitic; Anality; Anal-sadistic stage; Autoeroticism; Body image; Breastfeeding; Character formation; Cruelty; Drive/instinct; Erotogenicity; Eroticism, oral; Exhibitionism; Feminine sexuality; Libidinal stage; Libido; Masochism; Masturbation; Maternal; Object, choice of/change of; Oedipus complex; Orality; Organization; Organ pleasure; Pictogram; Pregenital; Primary object; Psychosexual development; Sexuality; Skin; Stage; Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality .
Bibliography
Ferenczi, Sándor (1916). Stages in the development of the sense of reality. In his Contributions to psycho-analysis. Boston: Richard Badger.
Freud, Sigmund. (1905d). Three essays on the theory of sexuality. SE, 7: 123-243.
——. (1908b). Character and anal erotism. SE, 9: 167-175.
——. (1914c). On narcissism: An introduction. SE, 14: 67-102.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Cypress Hills: the land and its people.
Magazine article from: Manitoba History; 9/22/1996; 700+ words
; ...fine pelts) murdered at least twenty Assiniboin in cold blood. This led to the creation...the same time some 4,000 Cree and Assiniboin were also camped in the Cypress Hills...conquer" was applied against the Cree and Assiniboin. Recognizing that a large concentration...
|
|
Interdependence and power: Complexity in hunter-gatherer/farmer exchanges
Magazine article from: Plains Anthropologist; 8/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...phase (ca.1730s-1810) of Mandan-Hidatsa and Cree-Assiniboin exchanges suggest that this interdependent system was characterized...patterns between the Mandan-Hidatsa villagers and Cree-Assiniboin hunter-gatherers suggests that this perspective is inadequate...
|
|
Western wanderings. (paintings made by artist Karl Bodmer on the Montana-North Dakota border region)
Magazine article from: Sunset; 3/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...Fort Union was the center of the Upper Missouri fur trade: Assiniboin Indians brought in beaver pelts and left with rifles, liquor...greatest triumphs may be his portraits - of the Mandan, the Assiniboin, the Piegan Blackfeet. "Bodmer and Maximilian had to have...
|
|
EARLY AND MID-HOLOCENE DOGS IN SOUTHEASTERN NORTH AMERICA: EXAMPLES FROM DUST CAVE
Magazine article from: Southeastern Archaeology; 7/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...domestic items for people in a variety of ways. Among the Assiniboin, for example, dogs wore packs that consisted of two skin pouches cinched around their middle (Figure 1). Assiniboin dogs could have carried loads between 30 and 50 pounds...
|
|
Analysis: Native American tribes learning how to get phone service on their reservations
Transcript from: NPR Morning Edition; 9/28/2000; ; 680 words
; ...LYNETTE NYMAN reporting: Donald Longknife lives on the Assiniboin Reservation in northern Montana. When he dials 911, his...you know, if we really need them that bad. NYMAN: The Assiniboin Tribal Council sent Longknife to this telecom conference to...
|
|
Robert Smith // American Indian Economic Development Association
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 7/7/1995; 384 words
; ...lays claim to an ancient spiritual legacy. "I dance to reconnect with the Circle," says the 24-year-old Ojibway; Assiniboin, a Chicago native. Smith is a student at the School of the Art Institute who blends his interest in fine arts and performing...
|
|
Tour of Duty; Disabled Vietnam Vet Walks Cross-Country In a Personal Quest to Honor Victims of Sept. 11
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 4/13/2002; 618 words
; ...leg injury and was told he had post- traumatic stress disorder. Not long ago, Fluent was made a ceremonial warrior in the Assiniboin tribe of American Plains Indians. His Indian name is Two Angry Bears. "I've got a deep aching in my soul that I can...
|
|
riding the breaks.(Missouri River)
Magazine article from: Sports Afield; 4/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...time on the river of the Old West. THE BREAKS and surrounding plains were once the home of the buffalo-hunting Blackfoot, Assiniboin and Crow Indians. Lewis and Clark traveled to the Pacific through the Breaks on their famous journey in the spring of 1805...
|
|
History, Power, and Identity: Ethnogenesis in the Americas, 1492-1992
Magazine article from: Plains Anthropologist; 8/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...Patterns of Ethnicity in the Northeastern Plains, 1780-1870" by Patricia Albers offers an insightful look into Plains Assiniboin, Cree, and Ojibwa. Albers asserts that as these groups became fully adapted to a Plains way of life (1780-1820), they...
|
|
Write your own version of history - in a personal journal.(THE HOME FORUM)
Newspaper article from: The Christian Science Monitor; 1/18/2005; 700+ words
; ...a German prince who explored the American West in the early 1800s. Among the events he witnessed was a battle between the Assiniboin and Blackfoot Indians. He wrote: "They came galloping in groups, from three to twenty together, their horses covered...
|
|
Assiniboin
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Cultures
Assiniboin ETHNONYMS: Assiniboine, Assinipwat...Eaters, Hohe, Stoneys, Stonies The Assiniboin are a Siouan-speaking group who separated...the upper Bow River in Alberta. The Assiniboin were a typical plains bison-hunting...
|
|
Assiniboin Indians
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Literature
Assiniboin Indians, northern Plains tribe, many...later to the upper Saskatchewan and Assiniboin rivers. Their southern branch was almost...gathered on a Montana reservation. The Assiniboin figure in Neihardt's Song of Three...
|
|
The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804)
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...early winter of 1804. The Mandan, Assiniboin, and Minnetaree Indians lived in the...Black Cat, Poscapsahe, who brought an Assiniboin chief and seven warriors to see us...the plains between the Missouri and Assiniboin during the summer, and in the winter...
|
|
Gros Ventre
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Cultures
...Belknap Reservation for them and the Assiniboin in Montana Territory in 1888, and they...100 and the combined Gros Ventre-Assiniboin population at 1,870 in 1980. On the...four districts with the Gros Ventre and Assiniboin having equal representation. Tribal...
|
|
Manitoba
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...the lands draining into Hudson Bay. This vast area included the present-day province of Manitoba, then occupied by the Assiniboin, the Ojibwa, and the Cree. The company established a trading post at Port Nelson and soon extended its operations south...
|