In this essay I will apply some concepts of Sigmund Freud in Twilight by Stephenie Meyer.
First I will discuss about Oedipus complex,which consists in the son’s desire to possess his mother and to be closely aligned to her.This idea derived from Oedip,who killed his father and married his mother.
This concept I will apply to Edward Cullen,whose mother died before he became a vampire,because of Spanish influenza.He is tormented by the ideea that she left him so quickly,and Edward Cullen lost his fulcrum and his center of life.He can’t take any sexual relationship with Bella because of this unresolved feelings toward his mother,which were transfered in the vampirehood.Edward Cullen suffers a mother fixation,and that means that he loves her mother so much,that he subconsciously considers Elizabeth|(his mother) as an idol,keeping respect to all the womens that he meets in vampirehood. For example,Edward saves Bella from a car accident,exposing his powers to a common public(superhuman speed and strength),and declares Bella his love:
“And so the lion fell in love with the lamb..." he murmured. I looked away, hiding my eyes as I thrilled to the word.
"What a stupid lamb," I sighed.
"What a sick, masochistic lion."
Edward found in Bella the image of his mother,and he prefers to protect her ,to feel her safe rather than pervert her.This issue is common for man with Oedip complex.Bella is human,has a warm heart and they are incompatible as long as Edward is from another world .This result from the cover of the book,where is shown an apple,but with symbolical valence.It represents the forbidden fruit:
“The fruit of the knowledge of good and evil”(Stephenie Meyer about Twilight)
Edward was influenced by the old society where he lived when h...
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...you'll see me. I won't come back. I won't put you through anything like this again. You can go on with your life without any more interference from me. It will be as if I'd never existed." (Edward Cullen to Bella)
Edward thinks that Bella is human and he will be just a memory into a deep corner of her heart.
In conclusion,in Twilight is a dark fiction and, if we look deeply, we can found some intersting interpretations,where we can understand better the differences between people and mentalities.
Works Cited
1) Meyer, Stephenie. Twilight. New York: Little, Brown and Co., 2005. Print,pag 141
2) Meyer,Stephenie.New moon.New York:Little,Brown and Co.,2006,Print,pag 60
3) _ _ _. Preface
4) „FreudQuotes”.Apsa.org.web30Jan2014http://www.apsa.org/About_Psychoanalysis/Freud_Quotes.aspx>.
5) Meyer, Stephenie. Twilight. New York: Little, Brown and Co., 2005. Print,pag 38
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Psychoanalysis is the method of psychological therapy originated by Sigmund Freud in which free association, dream interpretation, and analysis of resistance and transference are used to explore repressed or unconscious impulses, anxieties, and internal conflicts (“Psychoanalysis”). This transfers to analyzing writing in order to obtain a meaning behind the text. There are two types of people who read stories and articles. The first type attempts to understand the plot or topic while the second type reads to understand the meaning behind the text. Baldick is the second type who analyzes everything. Since his article, “Allure, Authority and Psychoanalysis” discusses the meaning behind everything that happens in Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” we can also examine “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas” in the same manner.
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Blasingame, James, Kathleen Deakin, and Laura Walsh. Stephenie Meyer: In the Twilight. Lanham: Scarecrow Press, 2012. Print.
Her need to be loved by him had taken over her idea that he enjoyed the power, she couldn’t live with out his love.
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The aim of this essay is to clarify the basic principles of Freud’s theories and to raise the main issues.
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Next is the analysis. The dream seems bizarre to Freud, since he only distantly knows Mrs. E.L. and feels no desire to strengthen their connection. To simplify the dream, he breaks it into elements.
In the famous novel and movie series, Twilight by Stephenie Meyer, an average teenage girl, Bella Swan, is forced to move from Arizona (where she lived with her mother) to Washington to start an almost new life with her father. She attends a small-town high school with mostly average people, besides one family, the Cullens. As Bella and Edward Cullen get closer, she uncovers a deep secret about him and his family. Their relationship faces many hard challenges and conflicts as the story develops. Both the novel and movie share very similar storylines, however, differ in many ways. From themes to author’s craft, or to relationships, these important parts of the story highlight the significant differences and similarities of Twilight.
Oedipus Rex, an ancient Greek tragedy authored by the playwright Sophocles, includes many types of psychological phenomena. Most prominently, the myth is the source of the well-known term Oedipal complex, coined by psychologist Sigmund Freud in the late 1800s. In psychology, “complex” refers to a developmental stage. In this case the stage involves the desire of males, usually ages three to five, to sexually or romantically posses their mother, and the consequential resentment of their fathers. In the play, a prince named Oedipus tries to escape a prophecy that says he will kill his father and marry his mother, and coincidentally saves the Thebes from a monster known as the Sphinx. Having unknowingly killed his true father Laius during his escape, he marries the widowed queen of Thebes, his mother Jocasta. Many events in the story should lead to suspicion of their marriage, but out of pride and ignorance Oedipus stubbornly refuses to accept his fate. Together, these sins represent the highest taboos of Greek society, revealed by Socphocles’s depiction of the already pervasive story. Before the Thebian plays, the myth centered more around Oedipus’s journey of self-awareness; meanwhile, Sophocles shows Oedipus’s struggles with his inevitable desire toward his mother throughout these stages of psychological development.
Wilson, Sarah. "Sigmund Freud and the oedipal complex." The Guardian. N.p., 8 Mar. 2009. Web. 1 Apr. 2014. .