Self-Castration by a Man with Cyclic Changes in Sexuality
- 1 January 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Psychosomatic Medicine
- Vol. 27 (1) , 53-70
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006842-196501000-00007
Abstract
A case is presented of a man who castrated himslef and who reported he had experienced cyclic changes in sexuality for 6 years. Developmental history, including physical factors of crypt-orchidism and bilateral inguinal hernias in infancy, suggests a setting in which comfortable masculine identification would have been most difficult. The feminine components of personality appear to have received considerable reinforcement from the family and other social groups. While psychiatric and psychological studies pointed to a non-psychotic but basically schizophrenic individual with paranoid features, endocrine findings suggested that most probably the patient was a normal male who had suffered castration. Discussion includes a comparison of the present case with those of other self-castrates and with the only other reported case of cyclic sexual alternation. Consideration is given to the following theoretical issues: the psychopathology of self-castration; the development of an identity in the patient; self-castration and the resolution of the castration complex; and the role of reality factors and fantasy in bisexuality and paranoid reactions.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Four Cases of AutocastrationArchives of General Psychiatry, 1963
- Psychoendocrinologic Studies in a Male with Cyclic Changes in SexualityPsychosomatic Medicine, 1962
- AN EXAMINATION OF SOME BASIC SEXUAL CONCEPTS - THE EVIDENCE OF HUMAN HERMAPHRODITISM1955