Psychoanalytic Approach Essays

  • Psychoanalytic Approach vs. Humanistic Approach

    946 Words  | 2 Pages

    me to my topic - the psychoanalytic approach vs. the humanistic approach. One supports and provides reasoning for mental disorders and specific behavior, while the other states that behavior is based off of personal decisions. Although both the psychoanalytic and the humanistic approaches are well developed theories it is conclusive that the psychoanalytic approach is more useful and instrumental in treating mental disorders. Both approaches defined: The psychoanalytic approach, proposed by Sigmund

  • A Psychoanalytic Approach to Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury

    1352 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Psychoanalytic Approach to Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury In Faulkner's work, The Sound and the Fury, Caddy is never given an interior monologue of her own; she is seen only through the gaze of her brothers, and even then only in retreat, standing in doorways, running, vanishing, forever elusive, forever just out of reach.  Caddy seems, then, to be simultaneously absent and present; with her, Faulkner evokes an absent presence, or the absent center of the novel, as André Bleikasten and

  • Psychoanalytic Approach to Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

    852 Words  | 2 Pages

    and also proves himself worthy of a courtly masculine identity.  It still seems quite daring and risky to apply psychoanalytic approach into the text itself, especially it comes with the Oedipus complex.  But if we put Freud’s three psychic zones and Sir Gawain’s conflict together, or related his fear of castration with his fear of being beheaded, the applying of psychoanalytic approach is acceptable.  Within the connections mentioned above, we can see how the father figures function and how a knight’s

  • Psychoanalytic Approach to Little Red Riding Hood

    707 Words  | 2 Pages

    Psychoanalytic Approach to Little Red Riding Hood Although there are numerous approaches employed in understanding literature, the psychoanalytic interpretation most significantly attempts to utilize the symbolic mysteries of a work. In exclusive contrast to the formal approach, which focuses entirely on the wording, the fascinating aspect of the psychoanalytic investigation is that it searches for a purpose beyond that which is strictly in the text. By insinuating the existence of innate and hidden

  • Man vs. Woman in A Streetcar Named Desire

    809 Words  | 2 Pages

    he does show that he feels sorry for his wife, in order to make sure she doesn't get any ideas to leave. Stanley is unaware of this, but the fact that he fears his wife's departure is an insecurity we will never admit to (psychological/psychoanalytic approach). Stella, Stanley's wife in the play, is a passive woman. She is displayed this way through how she responds to the people and situations around her. When she is beaten by Stanley, she understands that his drunkenness takes hold of

  • Psychoanalytic Approaches to Personality

    1740 Words  | 4 Pages

    surfaced during adulthood. Ideas about the subconscious, which saw the human mind as being in continuous internal conflict with itself, and theories that all actions are symbolic, for “there are no accidents”, were also major themes of the psychoanalytic approach. Successful therapy was a long-term and costly process, which most people during that time, with the exception of the wealthy, could not afford. Sigmund Freud’s main contribution to this new field of studying personality was in the area

  • Humbert Humbert of Lolita and James Gatsby of The Great Gatsby

    2308 Words  | 5 Pages

    inability to accept the loss of the object” (385). This is clearly true of both Humbert and Gatsby, who never seem to evolve past their first love. This essay will explore the roots of the obsessions of both Gatsby and Humbert using Williams’ psychoanalytic approach. It will also argue that, though in extremely different situations, Gatsby and Humbert obsessions are quite similar. The essay first deals with Humbert’s obsession and then moves on to Gatsby’s. Williams states early on in her essay that

  • The Male Gaze of Film and the Passive Glance of TV

    3125 Words  | 7 Pages

    cinematic pleasure. Yet one may wonder: can one enjoy the pleasures of voyeurism in other media (such as television), in which a fixed male ‘gaze’ may or may not be present? John Ellis’s examination of broadcast television extends Mulvey’s psychoanalytic approach to answer this question. Ellis’s articles, “Broadcast TV as Sound and Image” and “The Broadcast TV Viewer”, ask questions that are fundamental to film and television theory: what are the differences between the two media? Do audiences respond

  • Evaluation of The Psychoanalytic Approach

    1971 Words  | 4 Pages

    Evaluation of The Psychoanalytic Approach Sigmund Freud the founder of psychoanalysis (1896-1939) worked on many ideas and cases that were to do with the mind and the body. Freud spent most of his life in Vienna where he expressed and distinguished the concepts of the unconscious, infantile sexuality and repression. Freud identified psychosexual stages, which are: - Oral stage – (approx 0-2 years) During the first year of life the libido is gratified through stimulation of the mucous

  • A Psychoanalytic Approach to Wuthering Heights

    1097 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Psychoanalytic Approach to Wuthering Heights Before anything else, I would like to talk about the nature of the principle characters of this novel. I’d like to start with Catherine as she seems to be the central character of this love story. Of course the latter is my personal assumption. Catherine is the very representative of nature and naturalism. From the first chapters of novel and Mrs. Dean’s great and elaborate account of Catherine, we encounter the portrayal of wild nature represented

  • A Psychoanalytic Reading of Hedda Gabler

    786 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Psychoanalytic Reading of Hedda Gabler Attempting a psychoanalytic reading of a given text is a bit like attempting to understand a city by examining its sewer system: helpful, yet limited. There are several reasons for using psychoanalysis as a critical literary theory; the critic might be interested in gleaning some sort of subconscious authorial intent, approaching the text as a "cathartic documentation" (my own term) of the author's psyche; the method might be useful in judging whether characters

  • Virginia Woolf as Feminist and a Psychoanalyst

    1854 Words  | 4 Pages

    criticism, it seems obvious that the two methods are opposed to each other; at the very least, one method -the psychoanalytic - would appear antagonistic to feminism. After all, there is much in Freud's earlier theories that a feminist would find appalling. It also seems to be a conflict that the feminists are winning: as feminist criticism gains in popularity, the psychoanalytic approach has apparently fallen into disfavour within the academic community. However, Freud's theories and psychological

  • Lacanian Psychoanalytic Criticism in Harry Potter

    4051 Words  | 9 Pages

    Lacanian Psychoanalytic Criticism in Harry Potter The inhabitants of a faraway country known for its ivory towers and for its export of literary monographs were forever quarreling over who might best represent them. One day two tiny factions decided to join forces: the adherents of the Princess Childlit and the followers of Prince Psychian, the great-great-grandson of Empress Psyche. Both groups had for a long time felt themselves unduly spurned… by the powerful Board of Canonizers who had

  • Psychoanalytic Theory – Freud’s Approach Versus Erikson’s Approach

    1454 Words  | 3 Pages

    The two important psychoanalytic theories on human development are psychosexual development theory by Sigmund Freud and Erik Erikson’s psychosocial development theory. Many researchers use these two major approaches to analyze the human development in different stages of life. Since Freud’s approach was the foundation of Erikson’s psychosocial theory, there are many similarities between them. Even though they are both focusing on phases of life, there are still some differences on the definitions

  • Hank Case Study: Psychoanalytic Approach

    1222 Words  | 3 Pages

    why he has such a sarcastic attitude. Instead of thinking about his problems and trying to work through them, he eats and smokes, finding a way to self-soothe. As can be seen in this evaluation, Hank is a superb example of the principles of the psychoanalytic theory. He makes a very good case for psychosexual development stage fixation, as well as symbolic behavior and repression. After looking closely at his case study, it could be said that there is a direct correlation between his eating and smoking

  • My Philosophical Approach To Counseling

    1288 Words  | 3 Pages

    My Philosophical Approach to Counseling Definition of Existential Therapy One survey taken by Corey suggests a definition of Existential Therapy include two key elements: Existential Therapy is essentially an approach to counseling and therapy rather than a firm theoretical model, it stresses core human conditions. Normally, personality development is based on the uniqueness of each individual. Sense of self develops from infancy. Self determination and a tendency toward growth are control ideas

  • Quantum Holism as Consequence of the Relativistic Approach to the Problem of Quantum Theory Interpretation

    2618 Words  | 6 Pages

    Quantum Holism as Consequence of the Relativistic Approach to the Problem of Quantum Theory Interpretation ABSTRACT: In modern physics the common relational approach should be extended to the concepts of element and set. The relationalization of the concepts of element and set means that in the final analysis the World exists as an indivisible whole, not as a set (of one or another kind of elements). Therefore, we have to describe quantum systems in terms of potentialities and probabilities: since

  • A Modest Proposal With A New Critical Approach

    2067 Words  | 5 Pages

    A Modest Proposal With A New Critical Approach A Modest Proposal, by Jonathon Swift is very much an ironic persuasive essay. He is proposing the eating of babies as a way to help with poverty. Throughout the essay he makes many thought-out yet almost unthinkable arguments that support his proposal. You do however know he doesn't really want people to start eating babies. He is just trying to show a major problem in a shocking way. His arguments for the eating of babies are as follows: it would

  • Permaculture: An Approach to Agriculture

    3177 Words  | 7 Pages

    Permaculture: An Approach to Agriculture "Without agriculture there will be immediate mass starvation, but with agriculture there will be a continual eroding away of the productive basis of human livelihood." -Wes Jackson (23) With the exception of some indigenous cultures where hunting and gathering is practiced, agriculture has been humans' primary source of food production for thousands of years. As time has passed, humans have furthered their knowledge of how agricultural systems

  • The Atrocity of Saul Alinsky's Utilitarian Approach to Communcation

    532 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Atrocity of Saul Alinsky's Utilitarian Approach to Communcation Jeremy Bentham, one of the founders of Utilitarianism, believed his philosophy could provide for the “greatest happiness of the greatest number of people”. However benign it may sound, at the heart of Utilitarianism is a cold, teleological process which reduces happiness to a mere commodity. It is even worse that Saul Alinsky would extend this philosophy to a point where the truth becomes relative, justice becomes a tool of