This is the first book-length philosophical study of Husserl’s tran-scendental phenomenology and Freud’s theory of the unconscious. It investigates the possibility for phenomenology to clarify the uncon-scious, focussing on the theory of repression. Repression is the un-conscious activity of pushing something away from consciousness, while it remains active as something foreign within us. How this is possible is the main problem addressed in the work. Unlike previous literature (Ricœur, Merleau-Ponty and Derrida) all the resources of genetic phenomenology are employed. The central argument is that the lebendige Gegenwart as the core of Husserl’s theory of passivity consists of preliminary forms of kinaesthesia, feelings and drives in a cons...