Psychoanalytic Literary Criticism. Using Freudian Theory

Similar documents
Personality. Development of Personality

Classic Perspectives on Personality

Psychoanalytic Criticism

Chapter 2: Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, and the Genesis of Psychotherapy

Module 55: Freud s Psychoanalytic Perspective: Exploring the Unconscious

Name: Period: Chapter 13 Reading Guide Personality Introduction & The Psychoanalytic Perspective (pg ) 1. Personality:

PERSONALITY THEORIES FREUDIAN PSYCHODYNAMICS

PSYC Chapter 2: Introduction To Psychodynamic Theory Dr. Deborah Myles

Psychodynamic Approaches. What We Will Cover in This Section. Themes. Introduction. Freud. Jung.

What is Personality? How do you define personality? CLASS OBJECTIVES 12/4/2009. Chapter 12 Personality and its assessment. What is personality?

What is Personality? Personality. an individual s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting

Goal: To identify the extent to which inner psychological factors might be important in the development of different forms of psychopathology

Sigmund Freud ( )

Theories of Personality Dr. Arnel Banaga Salgado

Goal: To identify the extent to which inner psychological factors might be important in the development of different forms of psychopathology

Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (7th Ed) Chapter 12. Modified from: James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University. Worth Publishers

Chapter 7: Minding the Work

Reading Guide Name: Date: Hour: Module 55: Freud s Psychoanalytic Perspective: Exploring the Unconscious (pg ) Personality:

Hold on to your. There is a ton of information coming at ya!! Don t miss class this. Ouch.

Hold on to your. There is a ton of information coming at ya!! Don t miss class this. Ouch.

Ferdinand de Saussure ( )... SIGN. Language is a system of relationships among signs. signification

Insight - Oriented Approaches

Personality. Chapter 13

Personality SSPVB2: The student will evaluate assessment tools and theories in personality.

Psychological Perspectives. Unit 11 Mrs Ghotra

What is Personality?

Theories of Personality Freud: Psychoanalysis

Psychodynamic Theories of Behavior. Dr. Vijay Kumar

CHAPTER 3. Background THE PSYCHOANALYTICAL THEORY OF SIGMUND FREUD. part 1. The View of the Person. The View of the Person

Jean Martin Charcot Josef Breuer Anna O. catharsis: free association

Counseling and Psychotherapy Theory. Week 3. Psychodynamic Approach I: Freud s Drive Theory

Chapter 13 Psychoanalysis: In the Beginning

Personality: Psychoanalytic Theory. Rusk Psychology

Myers Psychology for AP, 2e

Personality. An individual s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting. Each dwarf has a distinct personality.

AQA A Level Psychology

Chapter 12. Personality

Myers Psychology for AP*

Sigmund Freud. By Amrita and Aisha

PERSONALITY CHAPTER 11 MEYERS AND DEWALL

THEORIES OF PERSONALITY II Psychodynamic Assessment 1/1/2014 SESSION 6 PSYCHODYNAMIC ASSESSMENT

Psychoanalysis. Sigmund Freud ( )

Bryant-Taneda. AP Psychology 12 Ch. 14 Personality

Psychoanalytical Literary Criticism. AP Literature and Composi2on II

HISTORY OF PSYCHOANALYSIS


Chapter 11. Personality

Chapter 2 THEORIES OF CHILD DEVELOPMENT

Personality. Unit 3: Developmental Psychology

TABLE 11.5 The Major Personality Perspectives Perspective Key Theorists Key Themes and Ideas

Theories of Personality

id = the part of the mind connected to desire ego = the part of the mind connected to logic superego = the part of the mind connected to morality

CHAPTER OUTLINE CHAPTER SUMMARY

Jones-Smith Theories of Counseling and Psychotherapy Instructor Resource Chapter 2 Test

6. Athletes often attribute their losses to bad officiating. This best illustrates A) an Electra complex. B) learned helplessness. C) the spotlight ef

Sigmund Freud

Theories of Personality and Beyond!

Personality Personality Personality Psychoanalysis Freud s Theory of Personality

Chapter 14 Personality

Chapter Two: An Integrative Approach to Psychopathology. Rick Grieve, Ph.D. Western Kentucky University

download full file at

Personality: What is it? Personality: Part 1. Psychodynamic Approach. Freud s Model of Personality. Freud s Model of Personality

Chapters Three & Four: Historical and Current Perspectives on Psychopathology. Rick Grieve, Ph.D. Western Kentucky University

Personality and The Psychoanalytic Perspective

THE MOTIVE OF THE ANTAGONIST S BEHAVIORAL CHANGES IN KATE CHOPIN S DESIREE S BABY : A PSYCHOANALYSIS PERSPECTIVE

PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY OBJECTIVES. Jennifer Scroggie, APRN, BC 1. Jennifer Scroggie APRN, BC Psychoanalyst APNA Conference 2016

INTERNAL DRIVES. Unit 2

Abraham Maslow. Albert Bandura. Alfred Adler. 2nd stage. Child's development during which bowel control is the primary conflict ages 1-2.

Freud Quiz. 5) Freud became famous for his early book on A) dreams B) sexual perversion C) cocaine D) bile

Core Course of BSc Counselling Psychology VI Semester-CUCBCSS 2014 admn onwards

Freud & Personality Development

The Psychodynamic Approach

Collective Unconscious What is inherited and common to all members of a species o Human mind developed thought forms over the years Archetypes

Psychoanalytic Therapy

Assessing personality

Psychoanalytic Theory. Psychodynamic Theories of Health and Illness. Freud s Theories. Charcot Treating Hysteria

What is Personality?

Personality. Personality 12/13/2010. Personality

Dr. Alex E. Blazer English 4110/ January Psychoanalytic Film Theory

Review Sheet Personality (5-7%)

PSYCHOLOGY - MR. DUEZ Unit 1 - Part 3 - PERSONALITY - LEARNING TARGETS

PYSC 333: Psychology of Personality

A History Of Knowledge

Name the Psychologist D-Fence Definitions. Trait Theory. What Perspective? Freud

Week 8 - A History of Psychoanalysis: Freud

PROGRAM CATALOG Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study (CAGS) CAGS in Child and Adolescent Intervention CAGS in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy

General Psych Personality 1

Module 6 Therapeutic Approaches in Social Case Work Intervention Psychoanalytic Approach Quadrant 1

Revision notes The structure of the personality:

Developmental Theories

Psych 120. General Psychology. Personality. What is personality? 7/21/2010

Henry Matisse, La danse, The Great Watershed

a. There was a significant need for better psychiatric care in his community.

SAMPLE DON T MAKE A FREUDIAN SLIP

Psychopathology: Historical Overview

Individual Differences (Personality) Abdullah Nimer

The Interpretation of Dreams. By Amanda Schuepfer Modernism Art and Literature 375

Psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud

Monday, September 8, 14 THEORIES OF

Personality. What We Will Cover in This Section. Personality Defined

Transcription:

Psychoanalytic Literary Criticism Using Freudian Theory

Psychoanalysis Definition: a system of psychological theory and therapy that aims to treat mental disorders by investigating the interaction of conscious and unconscious elements in the mind and bringing repressed fears and conflicts into the conscious mind by techniques such as dream interpretation and free association (google)

Freudian Theory Freud asserted that our unconscious is influenced by childhood events (owl.english.purdue.edu). Freud also maintained that our desires and our unconscious conflicts give rise to three areas of the mind that wrestle for dominance as we grow from infancy, to childhood, to adulthood These three areas are called the id, ego, and superego.

Rational Brain drives rules imposed by society

The stages of Freudian Theory: id - "...the location of the drives" or libido ego - "...one of the major defenses against the power of the drives...which work to suppress the id. superego - the area of the unconscious that houses Judgment (of self and others) and "...which begins to form during childhood as a result of the Oedipus complex" (Richter 1015-1016)

The successful completion of each stage lead's to a healthy personality as an adult. If, however, a conflict remains unresolved at any particular stage, the individual might remain fixated or stuck at that particular point of development. A fixation can involve an overdependence or obsession with something related to that phase of development. For example, a person with an "oral fixation" is believed to be stuck at the oral stageof development. Signs of an oral fixation might include an excessive reliance on oral behaviors such as smoking, biting fingernails or eating.

Freudian Theory Freud asserted that people's behavior is affected by their unconscious: "...the notion that human beings are motivated, even driven, by desires, fears, needs, and conflicts of which they are unaware..." (Tyson 14-15). Some people feel pressured to suppress fears, desires etc. into the unconscious area of the brain and this can lead to neurosis.

These memories etc. can be brought to the surface through things like hypnosis. Man operates in his conscious mind daily. These thoughts are often suppressed but can emerge through dreams, slips of the tongue now named Freudian slip

Symptoms of Repressed Desires or Unhappy Psychological Events "...repression doesn't eliminate our painful experiences and emotions...we unconsciously behave in ways that will allow us to 'play out'...our conflicted feelings about the painful experiences and emotions we repress" (Tyson, 15). To keep all of this conflict buried in our unconscious, Freud argued that we develop defenses: selective perception, selective memory, denial, displacement, projection, regression, fear of intimacy, and fear of death, among others. These defenses lead to neurosis.

Important Terms to Know Freudian Slip Id psychoanalyze Oedipus Complex Bereavement Neurosis Psychosis Transference Ego Superego Conscious Preconscious Unconscious Where can I find these? In this slide and the handout provided.

Questions to Consider: How do the operations of repression structure or inform the work? Are there any oedipal dynamics - or any other family dynamics - at work here? Is there evidence of a fear or fascination with death or sexuality - which includes love and romance as well as sexual behavior - as a primary indicator of psychological identity? Is there evidence of a struggle between the id, ego, and superego? What does the work suggest about the psychological being of its author? Are there prominent words in the piece that could have different or hidden meanings that could be interpreted as Freudian slips? Could there be a subconscious reason for the author or character using these "problem words"?