Title: NARCISSISM IN MUSIC PERFORMANCE: SINGERS VERSUS INSTRUMENTALISTS
1NARCISSISM IN MUSIC PERFORMANCE SINGERS VERSUS
INSTRUMENTALISTS
Sarah Kettner1 Richard Parncutt21University of
Music and Performing Arts Graz Austria2University
of Graz Austria
2History of Narcissism
- Greek mythology to modern
- psychology
- Competitive markets emphasise
- self-confidence, self-assurance,
- self-worth
- Narcissism defined in this research
- Subject libidinal investment or self-love
3Leading Theories
Sigmund Freud On Narcissism An Introduction
(1914) Ego Theory
Heinz Kohut The Analysis of Self (1971)
introduced the unified self idealized mirror
Otto Kernberg Early Ego Integration and Object
Relations (1972) Borderline Conditions and
Pathological Narcissism (1975)
4The Performing Psyche
- Are performing musicians predisposed
- to narcissism?
- Is performance motivation
- affected by narcissistic
- gratification?
- Does a singers libidinal
- Identification with their instrument
- affect their overall narcissism?
5Goals
- Explore differences between singers and
instrumentalists behaviour in relation to
narcissism - Compare narcissistic levels with performance
motivation
6Method
- Quantitative
- Standardised Narcissistic Personality Inventory
(NPI)Schröder/Schütz (2005) - Subscale dimensions Leadership, physical
vanity, entitlement, arrogance, ambition and
competence belief - Qualitative
- Performance motivation questionnaire - Kettner
(2007) non standardised - Recognition, self-expression, creativity,
payment, fame, self-affirmation and exhibitionism -
7Participants
- Experimental Group
- Music universities N156
- Control Group
- Technical universities (diverse disciplines) N36
- Department of Psychology (U Graz) N165
- Choristers N67
- Sampling criteria
- Age 18-35
- No self-selection
8Participant Sample
- Total sample consist of 424 persons, (273 women
and 151 men). - Their mean age was 26.6
9Who is the most egoistic musician?Response to
prejudice question
10Singers are not significantly more narcissistic
than instrumentalists
11Physical vanity of singers versus
instrumentalists and controls
12Singers have sig. higher competence belief than
instrumentalists and controls
13Correlations between performance motivation and
narcissistic measures
14Performance majors are sig. more ambitious than
pedagogy majors
15Results and Discussion
- Complexity of narcissism compounded by associated
characteristics such as exhibitionism - Overt and covert aspects of narcissim were not
distinguished in this research
16Singers versus instrumentalists
- Singers, unlike instrumentalists
- embody their instrument
- Singers not more narcissistic despite
- prevailing prejudice
- Higher scores on sub-scales
- physical vanity and competence belief
-
17Pedagogy versus performance majors
Between Subjects Eff. df df error F-value Sig
Leadership 1 155 0,602 0,439
Vanity 1 155 0,060 0,807
Entitelment 1 155 0,042 0,839
Superiority 1 155 0,813 0,369
Ambition 1 155 9,576 0,002
Comp. Bel. 1 155 0,384 0,536
- Higher scores of ambition in performance majors
could be due to differences in employment
opportunities - Degree courses in music education cover a wider
range of topics not only performance
18Narcissism Malignant or benign?
- Narcissism is positively related to psychological
health (Sedikeset al., 2004) - Performing artists motivational ideals are
consciously or unconsciously influenced by
narcissistic and exhibitionistic compulsions. The
drive to be loved, admired and to exhibit
something of themselves on the stage provides a
compelling source of gratification for stage
artists (Hamilton, 1997)
19Pedagogic Implications
- Increased awareness of their own narcissisistic
compulsions and those of their students help
teachers avoid exploiting their admiration - Striving for self-fulfillment and
self-gratification are intrinsically linked with
the will to survive and related to the
motivational drive - Musicians who develop and sustain a consistent
sense of identity can contend with the punishing
polarity of public adulation or criticism
20Literature Selection
- Baumeister, R. F., Bushman, B. J., Campell,
W.K. (2000) Self-esteem, narcissism and
aggression Does violence result from low
self-esteem or from threatened egotism? Current
Directions in Psychological Science, 9, 26-29. - Freud, S., Ed. J. Sandler et al. (1999). On
narcissism An introduction New Haven Yale
University Press. - Hamilton, L. H. (1989). In pursuit of the ideal
Narcissism and the performing artist. Doctoral
dissertation. Adelphi University. - Hamilton, L. H. (1998). The person behind the
mask. Greenwich Ablex Publishing Corporation. - Jacoby, M. (1999). Individuation and narcissism,
the psychology of Self in Jung and Kohut. New
York Brunner-Routledge. - Kohut, H. (1971). The analysis of the Self. New
York International Universities Press. - Maccoby, M. (2003). Die Musik als Geliebte.
Hessen Psychosozial-Verlag. - Neumann, E. (1966). Narcissism, Normal
Self-formation and the Primary Relation to the
Mother. New York Analytical Psychology Club. - Sedikides, C.,Gregg, A., Rudich, E., Kumashiro,
M. (2004). Are normal narcissists psychologically
healthy? Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 87, 400-416. Washington APA. - Wigfield, A., Eccles, J. S., Schiefele, U.,
Roeses, R. W., Davis-Kean, P. (2006).
Development of achievement motivation. In N.
Eisenberg, W. Damon R. M. Lerner (Eds.),
Handbook of psychology (pp. 933-988). Hoboken
Wiley. - Winnicott, D. W. (1971). Playing and Reality,
London Travistock Publications.