From self- + beration.
self-beration (uncountable)
- (rare) Beratement of oneself.
1983, Lynsey Stevens, Forbidden Wine[1], Harlequin Books, →ISBN, page 8:However, this self-beration had little effect on her eyes as, with a will of their own, they touched on the curve of his lips.
1999, Farid Esack, On Being a Muslim: Finding a Religious Path in the World Today[2], Oneworld, →ISBN, page 53:There are a few things that I have always found helpful when I am reflecting upon where I am, without it degenerating into a futile exercise in narcissistic navel-gazing or self-beration.
2009, Jacques Khalip, Anonymous Life: Romanticism and Dispossession[3], Stanford University Press, →ISBN, page 163[4]:Writing in a post-Waterloo culture that repudiated the trappings of usurping authority and revolutionary time, Austen depicts Sir Walter as the perfect example of a subject born out of ressentiment, affectively retreading the ground of the past with an impotent self-beration that props up his calcified sense of prestige.