Q: WHAT ARE PSYCHOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION OF CHARACTER OF HEDDA? Q: GIVE PSYCHOANALYSIS OF HEDDA GABLER.
Q: WHAT ARE PSYCHOLOGICAL
INTERPRETATION OF CHARACTER OF
HEDDA?
Q: GIVE PSYCHOANALYSIS OF HEDDA GABLER.
Ans:
Attempting a psychoanalytic reading of a
given text is a bit like attempting to understand a city by examining its sewer
system: helpful, yet limited. There are several reasons for using
psychoanalysis as a critical literary theory; the critic might be interested in
gleaning some sort of subconscious authorial intent, approaching the text as a
"cathartic documentation" of the author's psyche; the method might be
useful in judging whether characters are well-rendered, whether they are truly
three-dimensional and, therefore, worth our while as readers (thus satisfying
the pleasure principle); finally, in a larger sense, the psychoanalytic
approach can be employed to actually tell us something about our own humanity,
by examining the relative continuity (or lack thereof) of basic Freudian
theories exemplified in written works over the course of centuries.
If we are indeed scouring the text for
what can be called "cathartic documentation," we must, at the outset,
look at the period in which the work was written. Pre-Freudian works, that is
to say those poems, plays, short stories, and novels written before the late
19th century, are the major candidates for success with this approach. However,
20th century works, beginning with the modernist authors, pose a problem. How
are we to be sure that the writer is not consciously playing with Freud's
theories, perhaps even deliberately expanding and distorting them for
additional effect? Herein lies the problem with Hedda Gabler: The play was
written at roughly the same time that Freud was just beginning to publish his
theories. The question is "who influenced whom?" Obviously Freud was
taken with Ibsen's realisations of certain fundamental ideas, which were to be
the foundation of his (Freud's) work: repression, neurosis, paranoia, Oedipal
complex, phallic symbols, and so on; all of these factors are present in Hedda
Gabler. The question remains, however, whether Ibsen had caught wind of Freud's
work and decided to utilise it in the play. Perhaps one may be wrong in
supposing so, but having read A Doll's House and An Enemy of the People, both
earlier works, Hedda Gabler seems to embody Freudian concepts to so much
farther an extent that the possibility of a conscious effort to create Freudian
neurotic types and set them loose on one another does not seem altogether
outside the realm of possibility.
Whether consciously or unconsciously,
however, Ibsen has created extremely well developed characters. Psychoanalytic
criticism shows us this fact more clearly than we might "consciously"
have recognised from a mere casual reading or viewing of Hedda
Gabler. By applying Freudian theories to
the characters, we discover that they are manifesting pre-defined behaviour
patterns that we can go on to compare to our own, thus establishing a
connection between fiction and reality. The more a reader or an audience can
relate to, or at the very least recognise, a given character via familiar
neuroses, the more impact, the more "meaning" that character
provides. In this way, psychoanalysis is a positive boon, both for writer and
reader.
In general opinion, the most important
feature of psychoanalytical criticism is what it does for us when we expand its
theories. Freud himself was ultimately concerned with applying the same
approaches used in relation to the individual to the society as a whole. This
aim can be taken up in literary criticism by utilising Freudian and
post-Freudian psychology to look at literature over the course of history, as
well as applying it to various world societies. Admittedly, Freud's theories
are specialised and limited, pertaining mainly to western, patriarchal,
industrialised societies, and clearly there will be instances in which, due to
differing cultural norms, they simply don't work. Yet this, too, is beneficial.
The chief aim of the scientific method is to, as it were, disprove itself; that
is to say, to question continually the validity of a given scientific approach
until every hole is found and mended, every inconsistency recognised and
accounted for. So even when psychoanalysis fails, it still teaches us
something. Any theory that succeeds in shedding some light, even when it fails,
is worthy of consideration as far as I am concerned.
Therefore, in summing up, it should be
stated that psychoanalysis, although it has its problems, has much to recommend
it as a mode of literary criticism. While it may be at times vague, limited,
untestable, and not applicable in all situations, yet it provides insight into
the mind of the author, can contribute to the fleshing-out of characters, and
can point to larger societal issues. The use of psychoanalysis in moderation,
avoiding rigorous dogmatism, is an effective method of finding meaning, deep,
dark, subconscious, perhaps neurotic meaning, in the pages of what we call
sublimated mother-lust...er...that is, literature.
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