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Psychoanalysis and Hidden Narrative in Film - Reading the Symptom (Hardcover)
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Psychoanalysis and Hidden Narrative in Film - Reading the Symptom (Hardcover)
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Psychoanalysis and Hidden Narrative in Film proposes a way of
constructing hidden psychological narratives of popular film and
novels. Instead of offering interpretations of classic films,
Trevor C. Pederson recognizes that the psychoanalytic tradition
began with making sense of the seemingly inconsequential. Here he
turns his attention to popular films like Joel Schumacher's The
Lost Boys (1987). While masterworks like Psycho (1960) are not the
object of interpretation, Hitchcock's film is used as a skeleton
key. The revelation that Norman Bates' character had been his
mother all along, suggests a framework of reading a film as having
symptom characters who are excised to create a latent plot. The
symptom character's behavior or inter-relations are then
transcribed to an ego character. This is a shift in the tradition
of literary doubling from hermeneutic intuition to a formal
methodology that generates data for the unconscious. Pederson
continues the project of unifying competing schools into a single
model of mind and offers clinical examples from his own practice
for all its terms. Psychodynamic techniques that emphasize the
importance of working with the body, the id, and the ubiquity of
repetition are introduced. A return to Freud's structural theory,
in which complexes are anchored in the stages of superego
development, is used to carefully plot and explain the social
nature of the superego and its relation to authority in society
(secondary narcissism) and the otherworldly (primary narcissism).
Discrete phases of superego development and their ties to both the
social and the id revive the grand promises of classical
psychoanalysis to link with every field in the humanities.
Psychoanalysis and Hidden Narrative in Film will appeal to
psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists as well as
scholars of film studies and literature interested in using a
psychoanalytic approach and ideas in their work.
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