Psychoanalytic
literary interpretation
Psychoanalytic literary criticism is literary criticism which,
in method, concept, theory or form, is influenced by the tradition
of psychoanalysis begun by Sigmund Freud. Psychoanalytic reading
has been practiced since the early development of psychoanalysis
itself, and has developed into a rich and heterogeneous interpretive
tradition.
Freud himself wrote several important essays on literature,
which he used to explore the psyche of authors and characters,
to explain narrative mysteries, and to develop new concepts
in psychoanalysis (for instance, Delusion and Dream in Jensen's
Gradiva). His sometime disciples and later readers, such as
Carl Jung and later Jacques Lacan, were avid readers of literature
as well, and used literary examples as illustrations of important
concepts in their work (for instance, Lacan argued with Jacques
Derrida over the interpretation of Edgar Allan Poe's "The
Purloined Letter").
The object of psychoanalytic literary criticism, at its very
simplest, can be the psychoanalysis of the author or of a
particularly interesting character. In this directly therapeutic
form, it is very similar to psychoanalysis itself, closely
following the analytic interpretive process discussed in Freud's
Interpretation of Dreams. But many more complex variations
are possible. The concepts of psychoanalysis can be deployed
with reference to the narrative or poetic structure itself,
without requiring access to the authorial psyche (an interpretation
motivated by Lacan's remark that "the unconscious is
structured like a language"). Or the founding texts of
psychoanalysis may themselves be treated as literature, and
re-read for the light cast by their formal qualities on their
theoretical content (Freud's texts frequently resemble detective
stories, or the archaeological narratives of which he was
so fond).
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