Psychological Criticism - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 19
About This Presentation
Title:

Psychological Criticism

Description:

I am familiar with his theories of how the unconscious motivates our ... Sublimation: redirecting an unacceptable desire into a creative act. Memento (2000) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:137
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 20
Provided by: vincen76
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Psychological Criticism


1
Psychological Criticism
  • An Introduction

2
Quiz What do you know?
  • Provide the appropriate answer below.
  • I know who Sigmund Freud is.
  • a. Yes b. Kind of c. Not at All
  • I am familiar with his theories of how the
    unconscious motivates our daily actions.
  • a. Yes b. Kind of c. Not At All
  • I know who Carl Jung is.
  • a. Yes b. Kind of c. Not at All
  • 4. I am familiar with his theory of archetypes.
  • a. Yes b. Kind of c. Not At All

3
Beginnings
  • Sigmund Freud
  • 1856-1939
  • Why did you do that?
  • Looked to literature for answers and examples
  • Conscious actions driven by unconscious desires
    and fears (often in response to personal trauma)
  • Unconscious expresses itself in form of dreams,
    creative acts, slips of the tongue, jokes, etc.

4
Key Concepts
  • Internal conflict is caused by a struggle to fit
    into society because of hidden unacceptable
    desires or fears, often caused by personal trauma.

5
Discussion
  • If one did not deal with his or her internal
    conflict, what might be the psychological and
    emotional results?

6
Key Concepts
  • This internal conflict expresses itself in a
    variety of ways depression, mental illness,
    emotional disturbance, abnormal sexual
    activity, drug and alcohol abuse, obsessions,
    violence, etc.

7
Key Concepts
  • One can deal with traumatic events and
    uncomfortable emotions in a variety of unhealthy
    ways
  • Repression hiding ones desires and fears in the
    unconscious
  • Isolation disconnecting ones emotions from a
    traumatic event
  • Denial refusing to accept ones unacceptable
    desires or fears or a traumatic event
  • Sublimation redirecting an unacceptable desire
    into a creative act

8
Memento (2000)
9
Key Concepts
  • Displacement replacing an unacceptable object of
    ones emotion with a safe one
  • Projection placing ones unacceptable or
    unworthy desires or fears onto another
  • Intellectualization avoiding ones desires and
    fears by analyzing them and rationalizing them
    instead of feeling them
  • Reaction Formation believing the opposite is
    true to avoid facing the truth about a traumatic
    event

10
Felicias Journey (1999)
11
Carl Jung
  • 1875-1961
  • Looked to fairytales and myths for answers to
    human motivation/actions
  • Conscious vs. collective unconscious that
    contained images and themes common across time
    and culture (archetypes)
  • Archetypes present in dreams, myths, fairytales

12
Archetypes
  • Images and patterns experienced in the
    unconscious by all humans, regardless of culture
    or place.
  • Images and patterns that symbolize or guide ones
    psychological journey toward identity.
  • Archetypes help psyche develop by representing
    common experiences and shared knowledge of lifes
    journey.
  • Common Archetypes Animus/Anima Mother/Father
    Sage (Wise one) Orphan Destroyer Warrior
    Caregiver Fool the Double etc.

13
Psychology and Film
  • Films activate unconscious desires and fears.
  • Film is a form of voyeurism (scopic drive)
  • Fetishizing the body Body becomes a visual
    fetish for viewer.
  • Taboo Images Images and experiences forbidden
    society such as sex and violence give
    voyeuristic pleasure in film

14
Yet More
  • Films offer viewers a clue into the unconscious
    motivations, desires, and fears of directors and
    actors.
  • Similar patterns of images, plots, and topics
    occur of the course of a career that reveal
    something about the director or actors
    unconscious mind.

15
Alfred Hitchcock
16
Marnie
17
How to . . .
  • Ask why the director created such a film,
    particularly focusing on what may have been
    unconscious motivations
  • Ask why the character acted a certain way in a
    film, again particularly focusing on unconscious
    motivations
  • Ask how the viewers unconscious motivated a
    particular reaction to a film.

18
How to . . .
  • Look for instances of repression, isolation,
    sublimation, displacement, denial, projection,
    intellectualization, and/or reaction Formation in
    the actions of characters.
  • Identify internal conflicts present in characters
    that cause them difficulty fitting into society
    or being happy.
  • Note expressions of the unconscious in characters
    dreams, voices, creative acts (or any actions),
    slips of the tongue, jokes, etc.
  • Note descriptions of the unconscious in a film.
  • Note archetypal images or patterns in a film.
  • Note how a characters identity is developed in a
    film.
  • Analyze viewers response to the film, especially
    in terms of scopic drive.
  • Analyze a set of films by a director or actor for
    patterns of images, plots, topics, etc. that give
    clues to his or her unconscious motivations,
    fears, and desires.

19
Resources
  • Lynn, Steven. Texts and Contexts.
  • New York HaperCollins, 1994.
  • Giannetti, Louis. Understanding the Movies. 11th
    ed. New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall, 2008.
  • Pearson, Carol S. Awakening the Hero Within.
    HarperCollins, 1991.
  • Prince, Stephen. Movies and Meaning. 2nd ed.
    Boston Allyn and Bacon, 2001.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com