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Encyclopedia > Fetishistic
This article concerns the concept of fetishism in anthropology. A separate article is devoted to sexual fetishism.

A fetish (from French fétiche, from Portuguese feitiço, from Latin facticius) is a natural object believed to have supernatural powers, or in particular a thing created by people that has power over people. The concept was coined by Charles de Brosses in 1757 and was originally used in the 18th century by French and German scholars to characterize the earliest stages in the evolution of religion. In the 19th century anthropologists and historians of religion such as E. B. Tylor and J. F. McLennan developed the theories of animism and totemism to account for fetishism. The concept of “fetishism” allowed historians of religion to shift attention from the relationship between people and God to the relationship between people and material objects; moreover, it established false models of causal explanations of natural events as a central problem for historians and social theorists.


In the 19th century Karl Marx appropriated the term to describe commodity fetishism as an important component of capitalism.


Later Sigmund Freud appropriated the concept to describe a form of paraphilia where the object of affection is an inanimate object or a specific part of a person. See sexual fetish for more details on the concept of sexual fetishism and its sub-categories.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Background and Significance (3120 words)
It is the purpose of this study to re-examine the claim of an increased incidence of abnormal EEG in fetishists, to assess the effect of the serotonin selective reuptake inhibitor fluoxetine on fetishistic sexual outlet, and to explore the possibility of a relationship between the electroencephalographic and pharmacological studies of fetishism.
In fetishistic transvestism, the donning of a garment is not an attempt to identify oneself as a member of the morphologically opposite sex, but an attempt to possess more fully the fetish object, and by extension, the person with whom the object is more conventionally associated.
Thus the symbolic mechanism of fetishistic transvestism is a sort of sympathetic magic by which the fetishist is allowed to possess a human partner without having to submit to her, an elaborate invention for the purpose of having one's cake and eating it too.
Amputee Devotees from Cripworld.com - the Community.. (634 words)
Fetishists, on the other hand are of the opinion that "most people are repulsed by amputees, but not me" thereby trying to insinuate that amputees would be overlooked by the general population as potential mates/friends/lovers etc.
Fetishists, however, are extremely dangerous and are suffering from a severe mental illness and are to be avoided at all costs.
Fetishists can usually be identified by their furtive methods, refusal to leave you alone, harrassment and forced, unsolicited and/or surreptitious photography.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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