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Psychoanalytic Criticism

Psychoanalytic criticism reads literature through concepts of the unconscious, desire, and language drawn from Freud and his successors, especially Lacan.

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Definition

The branch of literary theory that applies psychoanalytic concepts of the unconscious, desire, and symbolization to the interpretation of literature.

Scope

This area covers the use of psychoanalytic theory to interpret literary texts, authors, characters, readers, and the act of writing itself. It treats Freudian concepts such as the unconscious, repression, and the dream-work, the Lacanian reorientation toward language and the structure of the subject, and the questions about reading and transference these raise. It describes these interpretive frameworks rather than offering any clinical or diagnostic claims.

Sub-topics

Core questions

  • What can the concept of the unconscious reveal about literary texts?
  • Should psychoanalytic reading focus on the author, the characters, the text, or the reader?
  • How does Lacan's claim that the unconscious is structured like a language change literary interpretation?
  • What is the relation between literary form and the workings of desire and repression?

Key theories

The dream-work and the unconscious
Freud's account of condensation, displacement, and symbolization in dreams, which psychoanalytic critics adapt to read literary texts as disguised expressions of unconscious wishes and conflicts.
The unconscious structured like a language
Lacan's reinterpretation of Freud through structural linguistics, treating the unconscious as language-like and the subject as constituted through entry into the symbolic order.
The question of reading
The reflexive turn, associated with Felman and others, that treats literature and psychoanalysis as mutually interpreting, focusing on transference and the dynamics of reading rather than diagnosing authors or characters.

History

Psychoanalytic criticism began with Freud's own readings of Sophocles, Shakespeare, and Hoffmann, and early followers such as Ernest Jones. Mid-century saw ego-psychological and archetypal variants, while from the 1960s Lacan's return to Freud, mediated by structuralism, reshaped the field. Later critics including Felman, Brooks, and feminist theorists redirected it toward reading, narrative, and gender.

Debates

Applying psychoanalysis to texts
Whether literature should be 'analyzed' as if it were a patient or a symptom, or whether the relation between literature and psychoanalysis is better seen as one of mutual interrogation.

Key figures

  • Sigmund Freud
  • Jacques Lacan
  • Shoshana Felman
  • Peter Brooks

Related topics

Seminal works

  • freud1900
  • lacan1966
  • felman1982

Frequently asked questions

Does psychoanalytic criticism diagnose authors?
Some early 'psychobiographical' criticism did, but much later psychoanalytic theory treats this as naive and instead analyzes textual structures, the dynamics of reading, or the construction of the subject.
Why is Lacan important to literary theory?
Lacan's reformulation of Freud through linguistics made psychoanalysis compatible with structuralist and poststructuralist accounts of language and the subject, giving it wide influence in literary and cultural theory.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts