Mind Time and Body Time: Poe, Freud's Wolf Man, and Aveni's Empires of Time Tramon McZeal, Kristina Williams, Stephanie Hernandez, Stephen Greene, Alice.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Psychosexual Development
Advertisements

A / AS Psychology.. Core Studies
 As we go through the power point, make sure you are reading through the multiple choice questions and answering them  You will need the answers to.
Sigmund Freud The Psychoanalytic Approach. Background  Began as a physician  In seeing patients, began to formulate basis for later theory Sexual conflicts.
Freud's Stages of Psychosexual Development
Sigmund Freud On Dreams…. Who is Sigmund Freud?  Sigmund Freud was born in He began his study as a doctor and then specialized in psychiatry. In.
Sigmund Freud & The Psychological Revolution. “Intentionalism” Before the Psychological Revolution Westerners generally believed that people were motivated.
The developmental approach & The psychodynamic perspective.
Sigmund Freud’s Stages of Psychosexual Development
Theories of Personality: Psychoanalytic Approach
Gail T. Houston Presented By: Connie Myerson. Agenda Key Concepts (20 min) Comparison to and Review and Discuss.
PSYCHODYNAMIC APPROACH TO PSYCHOPATHOLOGY Miss Norris.
Psychodynamic Approach to Personality
PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY Cher Schwartz. What is Psychoanalytic Theory?  Psychoanalytic criticism builds on Freudian theories of psychology.  An overview.
Introduction and History of Psychology Chapter 1.
Sigmund Freud: Theory of Psychosexual Development By: Sarah Beaton, Carly MacNeil, Michelle Cote, Stephanie Sinton, Jacob McDonald and Jeremey Doucette.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2003 Andrew T. Nilsson, Ph.D. Eastern Connecticut State University Andrew T. Nilsson, Ph.D. Eastern Connecticut State University.
Sigmund Freud ( ). A Brief Bio… Born into a poor Jewish Austrian family Initially studied to become a doctor Believed mental illness did not originate.
Psychosexual Development
Sigmund Freud Psychosexual Theory. Tell me what you know about Freud’s theory. Tell me what you know about Freud’s theory. Why is it called psychosexual?
Do Now: Is there one incident that happened to you before age 10 that you feel impacted your personality? What is your best personality trait?
Freud Psycho-Sexual Theory Oh, how sick can we go…
1 Psychology 305A: Personality Psychology October 9 Lecture 10.
Dr. Sigmund Freud Psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic Perspective “first comprehensive theory of personality” ( ) Biography: Freud went to University.
Psychoanalytic Criticism. Psychoanalytical criticism seeks to explore literature by examining: how human mental and psychological development occurs how.
PSYCHOANALYTIC THINKERS SIGMUND FREUD ANNA FREUD CARL JUNG ERIK ERIKSON ALFRED ADLER.
Understanding of Dreams. Understanding of Dreams..
Sigmund Freud May September 1939 By: Kelly and Nicole.
Psychoanalytic Criticism
Psychoanalytic Therapy
Oedipus and Electra Complexes FIY – a mini lesson in psychology.
Sigmund Freud By: Alison, Philip, and Ted. Background Knowledge May 6, 1856 – September 23, 1939 Started in Biology major then switched to Neurology after.
Freud’s Mental Model Id – we are born with the id, which contains the “instincts” and “libido.” (Relates to Darwin’s internal needs for survival and procreation).
Freud’s Theory Psychoanalysis.
Chapter 14 Theories of Personality. Difficulties in Understanding Personality The Usefulness of Theories –May turn out to be correct Explain how we got.
Sigmund Freud The First Armchair Psychiatrist. Why does he matter?  Freud is the first major theorist of Psychology - he began the movement that viewed.
Freud Analysis Oedipus Rex – Prophecy reveals he will kill father and sleep with mother, leaves, killed the sphinx, murdered a man (his father), becomes.
Sigmund Freud Controversial Complex Complete.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Chapter 1 Introduction and History of Psychology.
Sleep & Dreams. SLEEP & DREAMS: MY Q’S What happens during an altered state of consciousness? What is the difference between explicit and implicit reasoning?
Consciousness Original Content Copyright by HOLT McDougal. Additions and changes to the original content are the responsibility of the instructor. Sleep.
 Psychoanalytic Criticism. The Rationale of Psychoanalytical Literary Criticism  If psychoanalysis can help us better understand human behavior, then.
Philip Larkin - This Be The Verse
Dreaming Altered States of Consciousness. What are dreams? Dreaming permits each and every one of us to be quietly and safely insane every night of our.
Freud’s theory of psychosexual development Are you ready for this….?
Psychoanal ysis and “Anna O” Renel Desir Robert Hudson.
 C. as Sensory Awareness- aware of things outside yourself  C. as Direct Inner Awareness- aware of things inside yourself  C. as Sense of Self- aware.
Psychosexual Development
Sigmund Freud The First Armchair Psychiatrist. Why does he matter? Freud is the first major theorist of Psychology - he began the movement that viewed.
PIONEER IN PSYCHOLOGY SIGMUND FREUD. PSYCHODYNAMIC THEORY  Controversial  Complex  Complete.
THE VICTORIAN AGE Queen Victoria ( ) Features of the first part of the Victorian Age:  Faith in progress  Optimism  Moralism  The British Empire.
Your ISU Thesis and Outline. Different Ways of Reading » You could “read” both novels with a literary theory. » For example… » Marxist » Psychological.
Chapter 14: Theories of Personality. Personality defined The consistent, enduring, and unique characteristics of a person.
PSYCHODYNAMIC APPROACH. HISTORY AND CONTEXT  Sigismund Freud was born in Vienna on the 6 th of may  Freud came up with the psychodynamic approach.
Sigmund Freud Anxiety and Modernity. Life Secular, Viennese Jew Trained as a physician Pioneer of applied psychology study of mental functions and behavior.
States of Consciousness Waking and Sleeping Rhythms.
The Psychodynamic Perspective FREUD. The Psychodynamic Perspective “Psychodynamic” means “active mind”. There is mental struggle – especially in the hidden.
Psychology of Religion. Freudian Psychology Terms Collective neurosis – a neurotic illness that affects everyone Personal unconscious – contains the forgotten.
AP Psychology Unit #7 Notes – Day #1 Stress & Personality Theories.
Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality
Psychoanalytic criticism
“Structure” and “Function” Six Psychological Perspectives
Consciousness Chapter 5.
Psychodynamic Approach to Personality
An Introduction to the Mind
Sleep and Dreams Chapter 5, Section 2.
Dreams.
Psychoanalytic Theory
Psychoanalysts Freud Unit 5.
The Psychoanalytic Approach
Presentation transcript:

Mind Time and Body Time: Poe, Freud's Wolf Man, and Aveni's Empires of Time Tramon McZeal, Kristina Williams, Stephanie Hernandez, Stephen Greene, Alice Lloyd, Sutton Lowry

Part I: Edgar Allan Poe Poe was born on January 19, 1809 in Boston Massachusetts. He is considered to be part of the American Romance Movement. Eureka was his career masterpiece.

Summary of "The Bells" Silver Bells Brazen Bells "World of Merriment""Tale of Terror" "Tinkle" "Scream" Golden Bells Iron Bells "World of happiness" "World of Solemn" "Ring" "Shiver"

"The Bells" by Edgar Allan Poe Representation of Time Progression of mentality and mental maturity Progression of day to night Progression of age Progression of romance

Part II: Freud's Wolf-Man

Serfei Pankeieff (Wolf-Man) Suffered from Neurosis o Mental disorder of sense and motion o The chronology of neurosis: not organized by usual time measurement but by associations of a series of time-related disturbances Came to Freud in February 1910 Had several traumatic events throughout his life Wolf-Man's Sense of Time (Time Blocks)

The Process of Analysis Patient Talks, Analyst Listens, Analyst Gives Comments Allows memories to (re)surface The patient and the analyst try to make connections and associations with the events/dreams/memories Solution: together they create a narrative of the patients life

The Dream

The Wolf Dream and Life Associations

The Wolf Dream and the Primal Scene Primal Scene Castration Anxiety: Transferring his emotional trauma from the past to the present Viewed his life by associating current events with past events o Had to rewire his brain to associate events with chronological time/order

Mind Time and Body Time St. Augustine: His analysis of Time as presented in his treatise, The Confessions: Book XI, Time and Eternity o "What about those two times, past and future: in what sense do they have real being, if the past no longer exists and the future does not exist yet? As for the present time, if that were always present and never slipped away into the past, it would not be time at all; it will be eternity." o These are three realities in the mind, but nowhere else as far as I can see, for the present of past things is memory, the present of present things is attention, and the present of future things is expectation. If we are allowed to put it that way, I do see three tenses or times, and admit that they are three." What does this mean?? o The present is a fleeting attention; our acquaintance with the past is through present recollection of it; and our acquaintance with the future is through expectation.

The Wolf Man Himself Body Time: Twenty-three year old Russian Aristocrat Refined Millionaire with personal attendants and private physician Should be... So why does he need Freud? Mind Time: Stuck in Infantile State Lack of response to outside stimuli Total helplessness and dependency Failure of Basic Bodily Functions i.e spontaneous bowel movements General inability to deal with others and carry out normal lie

Psychosexual Analysis and Time Sigmund FreudSigmund Freud developed a theory of how our sexuality starts from a very young ages and develops through various fixations. If these stages are not psychologically completed and released, we can be trapped by them and they may lead to various defense mechanisms to avoid the anxiety produced from the conflict in and leaving of the stage. defense mechanisms Oral stage 0-18 Months Weaning away from mother's breast Anal Stage 18 Months to 3-4 years Toilet training Phallic 3-4 years to 6-7 years Oedipus (boys), Electra (girls) Latent Stage 5-7 years to puberty Genital Stage Puberty on Social rules

Time in the Process of Psycho Analysis Time and the Patient: Time is a mental construct, which within the individual is manipulated based on coding o Often Primal: coded in terms of basic emotions, fear, anxiety, stress, happiness Historical Chronology Time and Freud: Kronos? Time Control: Duration and Frequency Free Association: o Timeless o Uncovers past, creates link to present fixations and uncovers the past constructs that are blocking time and inhibiting maturity of the mind Provides proper coding: Language

Part III Aveni: Introduction & Ch. 1 Lemons and Oysters, Georges Braque, The Philips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Introduction We've got rhythm! -Anthony F. Aveni The music of ones life The reversible recurrence of time

Introduction Cultural Knowledge is determined by culture: …the way a people perceive [time] can only be revealed by studying, in detail, the way they reckon its passagethat is, the phenomena they see, the units they define to relate events to one another, and, most important of all, the images and metaphors they use to conceptualize time. Absolutist All human knowledge is absolute in nature, separate from culture: …all human beings think of time as duration and of duration as either cyclic or linear. …the cyclic is static (in the sense that all things return to the same point in time) and associated with ritual behavior, while linear time is dynamic and has more to do with practical behavior.

Ch. 1: Oysters, Potatoes, Bees and Mice & Circadian Rhythms If bees know when to turn up at a feeding place, they must possess some sense of time. Is a sense of time built into all organisms, or are we really being driven by the earth clock outside us?

Ch. 1: The Internal Timer Hypothesis vs. The Exogenous Hypothesis of Time Sensing Q: How is the connection between life cycles and celestial rhythm established? A: μεν …because these rhythms persist when the organism is deprived of functioning within the natural environment, every piece of living matter must be its own timer. δε Organisms oscillate with natural geophysical frequencies because they respond directly to changes in the forces of an all-pervasive environment. …[Isolated] organisms have a subtle ways of sensing what is really happening in the world outside.

Ch. 1: Humans Inner Rhythms + Grunion, Hamsters Sleep-wake Rhythms Menstruation, from menses or month (a contraction of moon- th) Grunion: These moon- based cycles may be a reflection of our original ascent from the sea. Aveni, p. 420 Exogenous vs. Endogenous (Hamster testes! Coral!)

Ch. 1: Man as Machine, Machine as Metaphor …the language used to describe the way we in the West think the coupled circadian oscillation works consists of neural networks, transducers, pacemakers, command posts, control mechanisms, cues, signals, oscillatorsthat familiar language of information retrieval and processing in which the twentieth century is embedded. At least since the Industrial Revolution, if not from the Renaissance, when we first began to manipulate and experiment with nature, we have come to have faith in the machine, to believe in mechanism as a way of understanding.

Part IV: A World of Time Building on Basic Rhythms Time begins as human consciousness Communication allows us to conceptualize others' interpretation of time This communication resulted as a result of numerically quantifying time>signifier represents real thing in universe, tangible (recognition of patterns)

Part IV (Cont.) Recurring Cycles Nature broadcasts in decidedly cyclical nature, only natural that we internalize pattern Other models of representing time Modern interpretation of time has made human beings nonparticipants, negative consequences (St. Augustine) Our conceptualization of time is purposeless

Part IV (cont.) Linearization of Time As Westerners we are caught in an everlasting string of nows, constantly working for destination Obsession with linear time stands in stark contrast to Trobriand gardeners, language possesses no tenses We assign value laden words to other cultures->superstition

Part IV (cont.) Controlling the Rhythms Rigid control of time->making money in highly industrialized, technological world Only the ruling class can introduce new festivities->must cultivate roots of past

Part IV (cont.) Controlling the Rhythm (cont.) Time captivates not as a pure fact of nature but instead as dimension of life that can be controlled We grabbed ahold of time and sought to manipulate it We were once harmonized with naturehave dehumanized time

Questions Edgar Allan Poe: Why do you think the author uses bells to represent the progression of time/human life? Bells were more prevalent in Poe's time. What do you think would be akin to the bells in todays world? Freud's Wolf-Man: In order to cure Wolf-Man's neurosis, Freud had to recover and reorganize Wolf-Man's life events. How did Freud cure Wolf-Man's neurosis (the process)? Do you think Wolf-Man's change of understanding time changed his sense of self or his individual perception of reality? What is your perspective on the psycho analytical process. Is Freud uncovering a lost timeline of repressed memories, or is her merely recreating a new time line in order to explain his patients dirorders?

Questions (cont.) Aveni's Empires of Time : (Intro and Ch. 1) 1) Do you personally view time as a culturalist or as an absolutist? Has your view changed since the beginning of the term? If so, how? 2) Exogenous (external timer) or endogenous (internal timer)? Humans? Animals? Draw on course readings/discussion to support your answer! 3) What do you make of the definition the idea that an ordered sequence can be recognized in our states of consciousness? Would you include it in your paper for Monday?