January 07, 2008
Castration anxiety, of a non-Freudian kind:
This interesting study published in Perspectives in Biology and Medicine compared the psychological effect of castration on two quite different groups of people: on people with prostrate cancer for whom the procedure was a medical necessity, and for people who wished to castrate themselves on a voluntary basis.
Motivations for voluntary eunuchs vary, but in certain forms the condition is thought to be related to apotemnophilia or 'body integrity identity disorder' - where individuals have a pathological desire to have a limb amputated, often taking quite severe and damaging measures to achieve their aim.
However, eunuchs have had a long and complex social and symbolic role in history that belies the simple fact of the operation.
In fact, there is quite a large online eunuch community, who share an interest in the procedure, whether they're personally motivated to have it, or whether they're just interested in it for, well, whatever reason sparks your interest I suppose.
Modern-day eunuchs: motivations for and consequences of contemporary castration.
Perspect Biol Med. 2007, 50(4), 544-56.
Wassersug RJ, Johnson TW.
This article compares the motivations for, and responses to, castration between two groups of males: prostate cancer patients and voluntary modern-day eunuchs with castration paraphilias or other emasculating obsessions. Prostate cancer patients are distressed by the side effects of androgen deprivation and typically strive to hide or deny the effects of castration. In contrast, most voluntary eunuchs are pleased with the results of their emasculations. Despite a suggested association of androgen deprivation with depression, voluntary eunuchs appear to function well, both psychologically and socially. Motivation, rather than physiology, appears to account for these different responses to androgen deprivation.
Probably not quite the literal form of castration anxiety Freud had in mind when he invented the psychoanalytic term.
Link to abstract of study on PubMed.
