Sigmund Freud's Theory Of Oedipus Rex And Hamlet

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The Oedipus Complex
Sigmund Freud once said, “Unexpressed emotions will never die. They are buried alive and will come forth later in uglier ways.” Sigmund Freud is considered to be the founder of modern psychiatry. He developed the theory Oedipus complex. The complex aroused in a young child is to have a strong sense of sexual desire for their opposite sex parent. The Oedipus complex only pertains to sons and their mothers.
Freud used Oedipus Rex and Hamlet to support his theory of the Oedipus complex. Oedipus becomes the King of Thebes for solving the riddle of the Sphinx that held the city captive. Jocasta tells Oedipus of a prophecy that her son was to kill his own father and marry his mother. Oedipus was taken from his house of Laius as …show more content…

These feelings of love and hate change as we grow, but they still can linger and cause neurotic behavior. Because these feelings are repressed into the unconscious, we are not aware of them as adults. Dreams ties in with the oedipal complex and unconscious actions act as releases or harmless expectations of thoughts and memories.
Hamlet is able to do anything except avenge his own father’s death and took his own father’s place to be with his own mother. Hamlet conscience makes him feel no better than his own sins of wanting it be with his own mother. Dreams are overly-interpreted in Oedipus the fantasy is brought into the open as it would be in a dream. In Hamlet the fantasy is repressed and we learn from the consequences.
In Oedipus Rex with the work of psychoanalysis Oedipus is the murderer of Laius, but he is the son of his murdered father and of his own mother and Jocasta. Sigmund Freud states that, The Oedipus complex may be conscious and observable in young children, but is largely organized around unconscious conflict and fantasy (549). Family dynamics reciprocal the influence of parents and siblings on the child, as well as the child’s evolving fantasies and the experiences of the parents’ relationships with each other (Blum …show more content…

Oedipal love is adoration, idealization, sexual possession, and acquisition. A growing child realizes that there is love between their two parents. Freud believed that the child internalized the actual parental values that he or she has consciously experienced. Unable to explain the unusual harshness of the superego and its instinct-like nature, he thought that it might also contain elements derived from the grandparents

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