Ady
ENG 220WE Approaches to Reading and Interpretation
PSYCHOANALYTIC
CRITICISM
Using the theories of a particular
psychoanalytic thinker (Freud, Adler, Jung, Lacan), these critics see
the text as if it were a kind of dream. This means that the text
hides, represses its real content behind manifest content. Dream work
involves (Freud) condensation, displacement. The interpreter must
make his or her way through the literal level to the symbolic import,
the meaning the writer cannot say overtly because it would be too
painful. As one critic puts it, "a psychological criticism notices
patterns of language beneath the surface and understands the verbal
play as if the text were a patient recalling more than she/he
realizes." (Schwarz 116)
Such a critic may:
- See
the text as an expression of the secret, repressed life of its
author, explaining the textual features as symbolic of
psychological struggles in the writer. This was popular before
1950 and is termed psychobiography. Such a critic more often used
Freudian theory as a theoretical templates.
- Look
not to the author but to characters in the text, applying
psychoanalytical theory to explain their hidden motives or
psychological makeup. Such a critic might use theoretical
templates such as Freudian, Adlerian, Lacanian psychoanalysis,
among others.
- Look
at ways in which specific readers reveal their own obsessions,
neuroses, etc. as they read a particular text. Holland's
Five Readers
Reading exemplifies this
approach. This would be an example in which Reader-Response
(subjective type) critics use psycholanalysis in their
interpretations.
When the psychoanalytical
critic looks closely at the text s/he usually:
- treats the text like a dream, looking
carefully at images
to uncover latent content,
expressions of repressed fears or desires either on the part of
the author or character(s).
- So, for example, the coldness imagery
in Glaspell's Trifles
suggests the psychological
coldness of the Wright marriage. Minnie's continual pleating of
the apron suggests her concern for her barren womb. Her
strangling of her husband is a form of castration, taking the
power from him that he had denied her in the marriage.
Etc.
- following Freud, looks for evidence of
Oedipal conflicts in characters
- following Freud, looks for libidinal
imagery: yonic or phallic images
You may encounter a psychoanalytic critic
who interprets a text to accomodate a particular theoretical grid
(e.g. Freudian or Lacanian psychoanalytical theory). You may also
encounter Feminist, Marxist, Deconstructionist critics, among others,
who use psychoanalitical theory in support of these other
approaches.
Brief (all too brief) Primer on
Freudian terms
Freud's famous tripartite model of the
mind:
- id = irrational, instinctual, vital,
unconscious (contains our secret desires, darkest wishes, intense
fears). Driven to fulfill wishes of pleasure principle
- superego = internal censor but derived
from societal control. Driven to fulfill demands of morality
principle
- ego = rational, logical, mostly
conscious part of mind. Regulates id and comes to terms with super
ego. Driven by reality principle.
The Ego is the battleground for forces of
the superego and the id:
Oedipus complex
- Formative, developmental principle. In
working out instinctual desire to possess mother, leading to
inevitable conflict with father, the child forms a personality.
Repression
- the suppression from consciousness of
painful or disagreeable ideas, memories, feelings, impulses
Dream Work:
- Displacement: the transfer of an
emotion from the object about which it was originally experienced
to another object
- Condensation: the representation of two
or more ideas, memories, feelings, or impulses by one word or
image, as in wit, puns, Freudian slips of tongue, allegories, and,
of course, dreams.

Neo-Freudian: Jacques Lacan