Subconscious Essays

  • The Subconscious Mind in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment

    1401 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Subconscious Mind in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment In Fyodor Dostoevsky’s psychological novel, Crime and Punishment, the suffering and isolation of the late nineteenth century Russia becomes reality. As a young man who has left his studies in the university, Raskolnikov finds himself wallowing in poverty and self-pity. With his dreams of becoming a prominent “Napoleon” of Russia destroyed, he feels that he is one of the many worthless citizens that he has learned to detest

  • Reason For Existence Essay

    648 Words  | 2 Pages

    Reason For Existence Existentialism was born against Age of Reason in order to reject abstract thinking and absoluteness of reason. Existentialists have claims and evidences to support their idea. They are trying to find absolute truth without absolute thinking because of this they will look for the truth all the eternity. In this essay, I will point out the existentialists’ claims in terms of denying absolute reason. First of all, reason is highest creation of mind and people have ability

  • Slow Dance Matthew Dickman Analysis

    1098 Words  | 3 Pages

    to get our subconscious thoughts into words, and that is what Matthew Dickman’s work in All- American Poem (2008). All-American Poem comments on American society; in fact, it acknowledges the conflict between American history and the current events of the modern day. Dickman's first collection is as American as Walt Whitman, Abraham Lincoln, and Pepsi-Cola. Winner of the APR/Honickman First Book Prize, Dickman shows his perception of the world through his body of work of subconscious thoughts.

  • Dada Surrealism

    1232 Words  | 3 Pages

    had ever seen before. From expressionism to Dadaism types of work ranged by all means of the artist. About the 1920's a new wave of art would soon be seen worlds over. This art form introduced psychology in a new way to look at the conscious and subconscious minds. From the beginning Dadaism and surrealism showed true signs of influence from psychology. Each using new ideas of the conscious and unconscious worlds in each art form. These ideas would come together and form a new revolution of art and

  • Art, Surrealism, and the Grotesque

    4648 Words  | 10 Pages

    of a work of art. The psychoanalytic critic will focus on the simultaneous attraction to and repulsion from the dream- like imagery on the surrealist canvas. Yet, this does not consider the surrealist notion of art as a liberation of the subconscious, nor does such analysis adequately incorporate the surrealist goal of political revolution. Instead, it reduces surrealist art criticism to the interpretation of dreams. This Freudian view becomes too limiting of our understanding of surrealism

  • Affirmative Action and Racial Tension

    1704 Words  | 4 Pages

    so much of America¹s work force spawned from integrated schools now, some may question whether racism really is the problem anymore, and many college students might answer yes. They see it on college campuses today, and they are not sure why. Subconscious prejudices, self-segregation, political correctness, reverse discrimination, and ignorance all wade in the pool of opinions surrounding affirmative action and racial animosity. With racial tensions ever present in this country, one might question

  • Guilty Betrayal in Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon

    1378 Words  | 3 Pages

    those moments he was required to expel devoted revolutionaries from the Party, sending them to their death. These subconscious feelings of guilt are oftentimes represented physically in the form of toothache or through day- or night-dreams. As his thought progresses with the novel, he begins to recognize his guilt, which emerges alongside his individuality. It remains in his subconscious, and it is not until Rubashov absolves himself through silent resignation at his public trial that he is fully

  • The Oedipus Complex - Sigmund Freud vs. Jacques Lacan

    1388 Words  | 3 Pages

    the surface." The irony of this is that Lacan's interpretations solve the main problems of Freud's theories. According to Freud, sexual desire is the center of everything. Every action we take and every word we speak has an underlying, perhaps subconscious, sexual theme as its driving force. The first stage in Freud's Oedipus Complex is the oral stage. In the example given by Tom Davis, an English professor at Birmingham University, "the child is in a state of sexual bliss: at the mother's breast

  • Hamlet and the Oedipus Complex

    1241 Words  | 3 Pages

    while his hate for his uncle Claudius seems to grow deeper. There are many parallels that we are able to draw from  Shakespeare's Hamlet to Sophocles' Oedipus Rex. Freud used the Greek myth Oedipus Rex as a means of breaking down the human subconscious. According to Freud, all males suffer from the Oedipus complex. The Oedipus complex can be defined as the male's unconscious drive to lust for his mother and the desire to kill his father. Freud believed that there are two opposing forces that

  • Sigmund Freud's Ego Defense Mechanisms

    522 Words  | 2 Pages

    theorists in regards to the study of the human psyche. Freud’s model of the human psyche is comprised of three core elements: the Id, or the unconscious mind; things out of our awareness. The Superego, or the subconscious mind, and finally the Ego, which lies between the unconscious and subconscious. Freud proposes that there are nine ego defense mechanisms that act the ego uses in its job as the mediator between the id and the superego. In psychoanalysis, an ego defense mechanism is an unconscious personality

  • Modernism And Cinderella

    682 Words  | 2 Pages

    Research Writing Though there are many fairy tales that have been created through the years, Cinderella is into our subconscious by stimulating the part of us that sympathizes with the mistreatment of Cinderella. Others say that the theme of a down-and-out poor girl rising up to become rich and happy appeals to any normal person. This theme is the common bond between all the stories. Recently, however, modern versions of the tale have surfaced in an attempt to relate to modern audiences

  • Comparing Isolation of the Protagonist in The Trial and Nausea

    669 Words  | 2 Pages

    Isolation of the Protagonist in The Trial and Nausea Kafka and Sartre provide effective settings for their novels by presenting their protagonists in isolated environments. Each character experiences very slight contact with other people, and the relationships they do have with the other characters exist at a superficial level. In The Trial, Joseph K. is placed on trial for an offense about which he is told nothing. As he attempts to discover the reason for his indictment, he experiences a great

  • Dreams

    548 Words  | 2 Pages

    we may never know, but from these following theories we can decide for ourselves what we believe to be true and further help us into understanding our dreams. My own personal theory on why we dream is that the subconscious mind is always working. This results in dreams. The subconscious mind in an attempt to file away all of the information from the previous day results in dreams. A dream in my opinion is nothing more than a chemical reaction in the brain. In laboratory tests, when people were awaked

  • Hamlet's Indecision, Hesitation and Delay in Relation to the Abuse He Suffered

    1647 Words  | 4 Pages

    Hamlet's Delay in Relation to the Abuse He Suffered In recent times, a psychoanalytical approach has been taken to explain a person's behavior. Freud argued quite heavily that people have a subconscious drive that determines many of their actions. Hamlet does not differ from this. A psychoanalytical approach will find a reasonable explanation of Hamlet's actions in Shakespeare's Hamlet. His actions are characteristic of one who has been abused. Hamlet's Oedipus complex is more pronounced because

  • Freud’s Structure of the Mind

    748 Words  | 2 Pages

    Weiten, author of Psychology: Themes and Variations, writes that “The id engages in primary-process thinking, which is primitive, illogical, irrational, and fantasy oriented” (364). The second part of the mind is the ego, which operates on the subconscious and conscious levels. The ego is the element that “engages in secondary-process thinking, which is relatively rational, realistic, and oriented toward problem solving” (Weiten 364). The ego seeks to satisfy the id, but it also operates according

  • A Sociological Perspective of Lord of the Flies

    1022 Words  | 3 Pages

    humankind: hunger for power, misuse of technology, and subconscious reactions to conflicts. Lord of the Flies, an allegorical novel by William Golding, illustrates a horrific tale of boys who are stranded on an island and lose their ability to make civil decisions. Throughout the book, Ralph and Jack fight for power, Piggy’s spectacles are constantly taken to create fire, and several of the boys become “savage” and act upon their subconscious minds. From a sociological perspective, Golding’s novel

  • King Lear’s Sins Pale in Comparison to those Committed Against Him

    832 Words  | 2 Pages

    Lear's decision to exile his own daughter, Cordelia. The King is of an advanced age. Though he will not, can not, admit it, senility is advancing upon him, clouding his brain and influencing his judgement. Combined with his pride, age, and subconscious fear of encroaching mortality, Lear has a great desire for flattery, and more importantly, to have the love of his children reaffirmed before him. After the two first daughters inflate his ego, Cordelia is left in the unenviable position of

  • What Happens When Machines Become Conscious?

    782 Words  | 2 Pages

    understanding of underlying mechanisms is apparent in the situation when experts in a field cannot fully explain how they accomplish a complex task, such as playing the saxophone or swinging a golf club, which they may only fully understand on a subconscious level. As brain researcher Fred Genesee (2000) writes, even the human learning process can be seen as a kind of “programming”: We now think that the young brain is like a computer with incredibly sophisticated hardwiring, but no software

  • All art is quite useless

    848 Words  | 2 Pages

    feelings, thoughts and emotions, as he will desperately seek to find out who he is and what his purpose in life is. As his mind keeps sinking in dark, depressive moments of contemplation, the world around him will gradually affect him less, and his subconscious will start building the foundations of a brand new world, inside his head. A world where clocks melt under the persistence of the moment, where the horizon bends under a quill and nature explodes into a force against which we are meaningless; a

  • Exploring Family Value Through Hillman & Moore's Eros Concept

    1411 Words  | 3 Pages

    Introduction to Hillman & Moore: The Family The concept of Eros is the personification of life, love, and the psychological function of relationships on the subconscious level. Carl Jung organized these elements of sex called the anima (in men) and animus (in women) as a source of subconscious thinking. As a result, to enhance the importance of Eros, Hillman and Moore establish the assertion that the soul searches for familial significance through myths and archetypes based on this concept. In