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QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS. CRITICAL TEXTUAL ANALYSIS--TYPES, PART 4 (PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY). I. PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY. A. Freudian Psychoanalysis 1. First formulated by Freud 2. Concerned with internal psyche structures & the complex relations between them
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QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS CRITICAL TEXTUAL ANALYSIS--TYPES, PART 4 (PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY)
I. PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY • A. Freudian Psychoanalysis • 1. First formulated by Freud • 2. Concerned with internal psyche structures & the complex relations between them • 3. Drives, desires, & wants are geared towards satisfaction • a. Motivation is primarily pleasure-seeking (or hedonistic) • b. Blocked motives lead to frustration, producing pain.
Freudian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • c. Pain eliminated from the conscious mind via repression into the unconscious or unorganized mind (or the id) • d. Control of the id role of consciousness (the ego) • e. The internalized ideas of others, plus self-criticism, creates the super-ego • 4. Defense mechanisms • a. Condensation--combination of two or more ideas, desires, or memories into a single episode, image, symbol, or sign
Freudian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • 1) Condensation occurs in dreams, where the manifest content (remembered events) represents repressed, underlying wishes & memories (the latent content); e.g. a locked door • 2) Condensation also operates in innuendo & punning (similar to metonymy (part for whole/whole for part) • b. Displacement • 1) Process by which significance of something is transferred (displaced) onto something else • 2) Similar to metaphoric transposition • 3) Redirect energy away from a frustrating goal & towards a more vulnerable target
Freudian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • c. Projection • 1) Process by which ideas, images, & desires are imposed on an external environment. • 2) Projection denies unpleasant self-accusations, projecting such accusations onto others (fueling scapegoating, prejudice, etc.) • d. Identification • 1) Process by which the individual merges at least some of another's identity with his/her own • 2) Three ways--can extend into someone else, can borrow from someone else, or can confuse identity with someone else (Rycroft)
Freudian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • e. Narcissism • 1) While some self-love is necessary to function, it is problematic if lead to self-absorption, egoism, selfishness, childishness, etc. • 2) Narcissists seem self-assured, but in reality are extremely anxiety-ridden & insecure. • 3) A problem in identify formation--develop feelings of superiority to protect from feelings of inadequacy • 4) Not the same as egoism--egoists may be selfish, but are often realistic, whereas narcissists are not • 5) Narcissists often deny their self-love; may assume a mask of humility, being altruistic, etc. • 6) Or may be super-confident, self-assured but with grandiose ideas
Freudian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • f. Sublimation • 1) Rechanneling sexual impulses from primary gratification into more socially acceptable gratifications (e.g. shopping, gambling) • 2) Civilization forces us to renounce uninhibited instinctual gratifications (esp. sex & aggression), creating guilt for such impulses • 3) Operates in fetischizing or the substitution of desire onto a less threatening image, usually something that can serve as a substitute phallus
Freudian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • 4) Mulvey notes that the "male gaze" of the camera evokes visual pleasure (sublimation & resolution of the castration complex) by both overvaluing women characters as fetish objects & undervaluing them (punishing them for being sexual objects) • g. Voyeurism • 1) A person with a privileged, yet hidden view, esp. who watches the sexual (forbidden) activities of others, yet without their permission. • 2) Produces guilt (because the scene is private) & a sense of power (it reveals knowledge which we "shouldn't" possess) • 3) Voyeurism implies omnipotence
Freudian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • 5. The Oedipal (or Castration) Complex • a. The process of maturation found in everyone--natural instead of environmental • b. Mature through 4 stages—oral, anal, latent, & phallic • c. Myth of Oedipus shows how children resolve crises occurring during puberty (phallic stage) • 1) Boys have castration anxiety (fears of castration by the father); eventually leads to an identification with the father & a rejection of the mother • 2) Girls have penis envy (fantasy that they have lost their penises); eventually leads to a re-identification with the mothers
Freudian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • d. There is also a reverse Oedipal complex, involving fantasies of incest with the same sex parent, & murderous wishes toward the parent of the opposite sex • e. A controversial concept, yet also often used to critique literature & film (e.g. Hamlet, Freud argued, plays out a version of the complex). • 1) Brenner (1974) argues that "for a literary work to have a strong, or, even more, a lasting appeal, its plot must arouse and gratify some important aspect of the unconscious oedipal wishes of the members of its audience" (p. 235) • 2) An example is the original Star Wars, which can be "read" as a working out of Luke's Oedipal complex
B. Lacanian Psychoanalysis • 1. Jacques Lacan believed that Freud's hypotheses must be interpreted symbolically rather than essentially • 2. Language structures the social subject • 3 Reinterpretation of psychoanalysis through semiotics & structuralism • 4. Posited 3 stages in place of Freud's oral, anal, & phallic stages of growth: • a. Preverbal phase--undifferentiated identity with the mother, pre-oedipal, instinctual
Lacanian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • b. Mirror phase • 1) the moment when the child sees itself as a self, in a mirror--separates from the mother & sees self as a subject • 2) More representative of femininity than the symbolic phase. with its assumption of narcissism • 3) The child experiences pleasure (jouissance) at seeing itself, yet also alienation & dismay, since separate from the mother (the first object of desire)
Lacanian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • c. Symbolic phase • 1) Child enters into the Symbolic, or the realm of language (language replaces the penis/phallus) • 2) Gaining the power to speak (through socialization) provides the child with the primary tool needed to operate in the public world • 3) To gain the power to speak means to repress the hidden desires for the mother, which kicks in a (symbolic) Oedipal complex • 4) Boys can identify with the "rule of the father" & resolve the Oedipal crisis by taking the place of the father, separating fully from the mother, then transferring their affections to an adult woman
Lacanian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • 6) Girls, however, are characterized by "lack"--they don't possess a phallus, therefore cannot identify with the father • 7) Girls must separate from the mother, transferring the forbidden desire to the father (or father substitute); yet, they also cannot separate from the mother, since already “castrated” • 8) Without a "voice," girls are thus Other, that which is an object outside of the realm of the symbolic • d. Ideas very useful to feminist critics, esp. when combined with other concepts
Lacanian Psychoanalysis, con’t. • 5. Difference • a. Both language & unconscious signify by means of binary oppositions • b. Difference, as Other, controls the mind; the Other & (male) desire become sexualized • 6. Jouissance • a. The totality of enjoyment--sexual, spiritual, physical, & conceptual • b. Exists outside linguistic norms (in the realm of the poetic), therefore more associated with women, who are also constituted outside of society • c. Women have the capacity for a decentered, multiple sexuality, "the sex which is not one“ (Irigray)