Psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud Jacque Lacan How we understand ourselves as individuals and how literature plays a part in this.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ben Gerke. Lived French existentialist philosopher, influenced by Kant, Hegel, and Kierkegaard, among others Father Jean-Baptiste Sartre was.
Advertisements

Utilizing the Metaphor of a Critical Lens.  Reader Response  Talking to the Text  Read Aloud.
The World of Literary Theory Feminist/Gender Psychological Marxist Cultural.
Psychoanalytic Theory of Criticism
Christian Metz “A film is difficult to explain because it is easy to understand . . .”
Psychoanalytic Criticism Sigmund Freud Interpretation of Dreams (1901) Tripartite structure of the human mind: Ego/Id/Superego Ego: Conscious self, “I”
Fetishism and Transitional Object. Outline Freud’s Fetishism What is a fetish? Fear of Castration  narcissism Substitute for the penis Transitional Object.
Gail T. Houston Presented By: Connie Myerson. Agenda Key Concepts (20 min) Comparison to and Review and Discuss.
The Art of Learning – second half. The first half of the module concentrated on metaphor itself, and your own construction of contemporary metaphors.
The financial imperatives of the entertainment industries and their impact on family bonds CAPITALISATION.
Week 8 Lacan #2.
Weeks 7 Lacan #1.
Freud: Consequences of Repression Psychological Disorders.
How to Read Literature Like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster
Psychological/Psychoanalytic Criticism
PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY Cher Schwartz. What is Psychoanalytic Theory?  Psychoanalytic criticism builds on Freudian theories of psychology.  An overview.
Mirror Stage Imaginary Symbolic Real
Introduction to Freud. Part I: The Topographical Model Sigmund Freud (1856–1939) was an Austrian neurologist who became known as the founding father of.
Terms & Major Concepts Mirror Stage, the Unconscious and the Phallus
Archetypes. What is an archetype? Archetype is derived from Greek – archos meaning “first” – typos meaning “a mark” Literally means “first mark” Defined.
Psychoanalytic criticism By: Linda D’Alessandro. Psychoanalytic literary criticism refers to literary criticism which, in method, concept, theory, or.
A method of analyzing psychic phenomena and treating emotional disorders that involves treatment sessions during which the patient is encouraged to talk.
Socialization Over the Life Course
Psychoanalytical Literary Criticism Or, why all characters, authors, and readers have issues.
Chapter 11.  First to propose unified theory to understand and explain human behavior  Most complete, complex, and controversial Some treat work as.
Chapter 3 Socialization Why Is Socialization Important Around the Globe? Social Psychological Theories of Human Development Sociological Theories of Human.
Chapter 3 Socialization.
3 Structures of Personality Freud’s Psychoanalysis Theory Id Ego Super ego.
Psychoanalytic Criticism
Psychodynamic Theory Sigmund Freud -“Humans have little to no capacity for free will…” -“Human behavior is driven by a desire for pleasure and is governed.
AP Literature and Composition November 3, 2008 Ms. Cares.
How to Read Literature Like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster A Lively and Entertaining Guide to Reading Between the Lines Review Chapters
Utilizing the Metaphor of a Critical Lens.  Reader Response  Talking to the Text  Read Aloud.
By: Fiona, Sonny, and Caroline. Psychoanalysis attempts to understand the workings and source of unconscious desires, needs, anxieties, and behavior of.
Freud and Psychoanalytical Theory. Sigmund Freud ( ) Austrian Psychologist Founded the clinical practice of psychoanalysis to treat psychopathology.
An introduction to literary analysis
PSYCHOANALYSIS & GENDER By: CARMEN ESSA Edited By: Dr. Picart Associate Professor of English Courtesy Associate Professor of Law.
Chapter5 Psychoanalytic criticism
In the Footsteps of Freud: The Ultimate Guide To Psychoanalytic Theory By Rachel Quade.
SELF AS A SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONISM ACTIVE INDIVIDUAL Cooley.
Chapter 3 Socialization.
Psychoanalysis. psychology initially defined as understanding of mental and emotional processes as they related to language, literature and culture psychoanalysis.
Psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud Jacque Lacan How we understand ourselves as individuals and how literature plays a part in this.
Freud and Lacan Psychoanalysis: Applying the Concept to Critical Theory Amber Beard.
Chapter 4 Socialization Why Is Socialization Important Around the Globe? Social Psychological Theories of Human Development Sociological Theories of Human.
Jacques Lacan. Imaginary 1. How we see ourselves in the first-person; parts of the whole do not work together, but we strive to be(come) … 2. The image.
Psychoanalytic Criticism. What is it? Psychoanalysis was a form of therapy founded by Sigmund Freud ( ). Sigmund Freud Patients “cured” by becoming.
1 Hamlet Using psychological criticism in literature: Hamlet.
Psychoanalytic Criticism. Sigmund Freud ( ): Tension, or discrepancy, between the conscious "surface life" and the unconscious, which is the unseen,
CRITICAL METHODOLOGIES. LITERARY THEORY Literature (as well as art and culture) can be read and analyzed through a number of different critical lenses.
Psychoanalytic approaches Week 9. Lecture outline i What’s involved in looking? ii Unconscious structures: Freud’s Oedipal Complex iii Unconscious structures:
By Joe Hummer and Joe Martin. Lacan reconceptualized Freud using post structuralism. He focused on early development and how this affects the unconscious.
Psychoanalytic Literary Theory Examining The Metamorphosis through this lens.
Psychoanalytical Literary Criticism
Psychoanalytic criticism
Return to the Meaning of Freud
Psychoanalytic/Freudian Theory
Psychoanalytic/Freud Criticism
Psychoanalytic Criticism
Erik Erikson and Life Cycle
PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
Credit to my student: Anabel Rojas
PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
The Bluest Eye Toni Morrison.
Psychoanalytical Literary Criticism
Psychoanalytical Literary Criticism
SIGMUND FREUD Ignore your Id. Your superego wants you to take out your Language Arts Notes right now. .
Sigmund Freud’s Theory of the Unconscious
Psychological Criticism
Presentation transcript:

Psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud Jacque Lacan How we understand ourselves as individuals and how literature plays a part in this

Lacan - Psychological theory Psychoanalytic theory deals with these questions How do we understand ourselves as individuals? How can literature help us understand ourselves? How do we become fully functioning members of society? How do we gain a sense of identity?

Our Unconscious The unconscious is the foundation of all being and it is structured like language. Our unconscious is made up of wishes, desires, images that are always the signifiers and never the signified. There is an endless chain of signifiers without an anchor. Self is an illusion, the product of the unconscious. How do we go from infancy to the illusion called “self” The process of becoming an adult (a “self”) is the process of creating an illusion of an anchor, a stable reference point for all the signifieds. The Other is a structural position in the symbolic order. It is the place that everyone and everything is trying to get to.

A part of Lacan’s theory ConceptPhase of development Need (mother’s breast) Real (perfect unity, no language) Demand (need recognition and love, not just objects) Imaginary (sense of self is a misperception of self in mirror) Desire (since self is other, there is a sustained and never-ending lack) Symbolic (The symbolic order is the place of adulthood. Submit to rules of language)

The objet a Desire’s main task is to keep itself circulating. That objet a is perceived as a missing piece, shows that Other is not clearly distinguished from self. Value comes from being perceived as a missing part of the subject self. The meaning is in the pursuit. The pursuit of the objet a is the condition for the production of art – the enjoyment of otherness. The objet a grants an excuse for the pursuit. There is a reason to pursue otherness when you see self as lacking. The missing piece is retroactively given. It was not necessarily ever missing. It’s just a perception. Narrators can work like advertising. To create the perception in the reader that something is missing.

Abjection Abjection and the abject character - embracing what we are supposed to be pushing away as impure –Abject hero (Shrek) (Quasimodo) –Abject characters haunt the edges of society –Physical abjection can be impossible to mask –Natalie is an obviously abject character –Young deal with abjection especially as adolescents.