Thesis advisor: Robin LydenbergThe figure of Sigmund Freud haunts the modern consciousness, but popular culture too often reduces Freud to a simplistic set of concepts or a figure of fun. The popular image of Freud is a reduction, a caricature – a fiction. The fictionalization of Freud is hardly a new development, however: the first person to fictionalize Freud was Freud himself. In writings such as The Interpretation of Dreams and the Dora case, Freud tells his own story, as well as the stories of his developing theory of psychoanalysis and his patient Ida Bauer. Writers like Hélène Cixous continue in Freud's own tradition as they probe Freud's unconscious mind and challenge his public persona, creating a portrait of Freud that is not a re...
Michel de Certeau has clearly highlighted the original status of the fiction in the writing of psych...
What happens when the fictional characters of Shakespeare are transformed from the stage/page to the...
22 pagesIn his 1891 On Aphasia Freud defines the “thing” in the terms of J.S. Mill’s empiricist phen...
Brief description of Freud's life and work, emphasising the role of fictive belief and experience (p...
In this dissertation, I demonstrate the relationship between narrative representation and psychoanal...
The author looks at three readings of Freud by Derrida, Michel de Certeau, and Deleuze/Guattari, try...
Freud well known for his psychoanalytic theory relates to art in general but focuses on literature i...
An analysis of Louise Bourgeois' exhibition at the Freud Museum London in relation to Melanie Klein'...
Sigmund Freud marque l'histoire de la pensée occidentale pas simplement en créant la psychanalyse ma...
Bibliography: leaves 201-209.The general aim of this study is to arrive at a critical assessment of ...
As humans, our minds are divided into various different parts, and it is often our experiences that ...
The connection between Sigmund Freud and modernism is firmly established and there is an increasing ...
At the beginning of the final lecture in Freud\u27s 1933 publication, New Introductory Lectures on P...
From its beginning, psychoanalysis has always been a 'personal' affair. This paper presents an autob...
Historiographic metafiction and postmodern pastiche, both defined by critic Linda Hutcheon as subver...
Michel de Certeau has clearly highlighted the original status of the fiction in the writing of psych...
What happens when the fictional characters of Shakespeare are transformed from the stage/page to the...
22 pagesIn his 1891 On Aphasia Freud defines the “thing” in the terms of J.S. Mill’s empiricist phen...
Brief description of Freud's life and work, emphasising the role of fictive belief and experience (p...
In this dissertation, I demonstrate the relationship between narrative representation and psychoanal...
The author looks at three readings of Freud by Derrida, Michel de Certeau, and Deleuze/Guattari, try...
Freud well known for his psychoanalytic theory relates to art in general but focuses on literature i...
An analysis of Louise Bourgeois' exhibition at the Freud Museum London in relation to Melanie Klein'...
Sigmund Freud marque l'histoire de la pensée occidentale pas simplement en créant la psychanalyse ma...
Bibliography: leaves 201-209.The general aim of this study is to arrive at a critical assessment of ...
As humans, our minds are divided into various different parts, and it is often our experiences that ...
The connection between Sigmund Freud and modernism is firmly established and there is an increasing ...
At the beginning of the final lecture in Freud\u27s 1933 publication, New Introductory Lectures on P...
From its beginning, psychoanalysis has always been a 'personal' affair. This paper presents an autob...
Historiographic metafiction and postmodern pastiche, both defined by critic Linda Hutcheon as subver...
Michel de Certeau has clearly highlighted the original status of the fiction in the writing of psych...
What happens when the fictional characters of Shakespeare are transformed from the stage/page to the...
22 pagesIn his 1891 On Aphasia Freud defines the “thing” in the terms of J.S. Mill’s empiricist phen...