Friday, September 20, 2013

The "Uncanny" by Sigmund Freud

Part 1
  1. Freud begins looking into the realm of the "uncanny" through the use of aesthetics, but in his sense aesthetics is understood to be not only a visual theory but also the "qualities of feeling". The feeling of the "uncanny" relates to what is frightening and what "excites fear in general". He makes the valid point that not every person can have the same idea of what is 'uncanny' but his goal is to find in what ways this feeling can be evoked from people, so he could better understand the feeling of fear and what could cause it.
  2. The term "unheimlich" or what is unfamiliar reflects that new experiences have the possibility of creating the feeling of the 'uncanny'. He makes the point that "something has to be added to what is novel and unfamiliar in order to make it 'uncanny'." This shows that sometimes there is no fear in experiencing something new, but to have the fear of the "uncanny” there has to be something even more obscure that brings out the sense of fear.
  3. A sense of the "uncanny" could come from "doubts whether an apparently animate being is really alive; or conversely, whether a lifeless object might not be in fact animate". Some odd feeling or sense of misunderstanding of the object or being throws off the balance of truly understanding the life or use of something. He tells the tale of a student named Nathaniel who believes in the spirit of the sandman to the point where a man approaches the house and Nathaniel convinces himself that this man is the sandman coming for him. Then this boy believes a doll to be real because of its life like qualities and becomes infatuated with her. Soon he is crushed to discover this being is actually a doll and she is ripped apart in front of him. Finally, when he is with his intended betrothed, falls into a fit of madness from his own past deceptions and attempts to kill her.
  4. This all reflects intellectual uncertainty of something that the mind can play into what a person thinks is real or wants to believe is real. Freud delves deeper into the subtexts of the stories and connects it to the fear of going blind or the fear of being castrated; losing a vital part of yourself in the ideas of reproduction
Part 2
  1. Within the second search of the "uncanny" Freud begins to break down theme of the "double" in narratives. These connections could be with "reflections, shadows, guardian spirits, and the belief of the soul and with fear of death". This concept of the "double" can manifest itself within someone's ego development, makes them aware of their "conscience" and then the person becomes fixated on things within their own head that might not actually be happening. So the mind projects outward something that is foreign instead of the foreign being projected onto the being.
  2. He later elaborates on the "self-regarding feeling, a regression to a time when the ego had not yet marked itself off sharply from the external world and from other people". It could be like the helpless feeling someone could have while in a bad dream. It occurs from the double or the repetition of something over and over again so it begins to, once again, manifest itself within someone’s mind and take over. He states that it could be ... "a compulsion powerful enough to overrule the pleasure principle, lending to certain aspects of the mind..."
  3. Freud begins to tell a story of how a man had wanted to create a form of repetition for him, sitting in the same room for a medical purpose, and was prevented to do so and wished something ill upon the person preventing him from his norms. That person had fallen ill, and this coincidence deeply afflicted the man and gave him dread. 
  4. Freud breaks down his study to two points which elaborate more on how people reflect inward on their anxieties to push them outward and apply their own thoughts and experiences to create something that frightening or uncomfortable.
    1. "That every affect belonging to an emotional impulse, is transformed into anxiety, then among instances of frightening things there must be one class in which the frightening element can be shown to be something repressed."
    2.  "This class of frightening things would then constitute the uncanny; and it must be a matter of indifference whether what is uncanny itself originally frightening or whether it carried some other affect."
  5. Another "unhemlich" thing that could cause the "uncanny" is a persons relationship with death. He elaborated that it hasn't been yet decided that death is inevitable or that it is a regular event that is avoidable. The uncertainty of this as well as the unknown can create the "uncanny". The thoughts of death and the state as well as death and religion can play into a person’s relationship with death and how it would affect them. Freud calls death a "primitive feeling" that comes from repression.
  6. Fiction and magical things such as witches, magic and so on could be "uncanny"; it applies the alternative to the world that is already known to the general masses. The possibility of higher more powerful creatures and beings existing could bring a sense of "uncanny". The possibility that something or someone from an imagination could possibly exist.
Part 3
1.     As stated in part two, the fairy tales and fiction could bring the sense of “uncanny” to a persons mind. Upon this fiction could reanimate death, and bring back what has been gone. Freud also mentions the “uncanny” affect of silence, darkness and solitude.
2.    The “uncanny” could be a result from the “actual repression of some content thought and a return on this repressed content, not a cessation of belief in reality”. He relates “uncanny” experiences to what has happened to a person in their childhood that could affect them in adulthood.
3.    The point is made to the visual aesthetic that “representation could coincide with the realities we are familiar with or departs from them in what particulars (the author or creator) pleases.” When relating to art or writing, the creator can use the tool of representation to help bring out the sense of the “uncanny” through language, visual or textual, that tells enough of a narrative to affect the viewer through the psychological play

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