Disciplines
outside the scope of medicine, such as literature and art, have
powerfully drawn the attention of psychoanalysis. Artistic creation
reflects the artist's inner world and his unconscious. So
psychoanalysis analyzes the work of an artist, applying the same
criteria used to decipher the dreams of a patient.
The
artist is, in and of himself, an unusual case, not only worthy of deep
study, but he should also trigger admiration in us. The artist is a
different being, whose inner voice requires him to lead a life different
from the one led by the common man. He will suffer and enjoy his
torment, that vital imperative that leads him to travel down unusual
paths. On this point, Freud believes that what makes the artist choose
paths that are different from those of other people is sublimation; this
is what channels the power of his libido along courses different from
the usual in order to vent the tensions of their psychic contents.
Freud
published a book called "Psychoanalysis of Art" in which he presents
the analysis of the work of five artists, who are: Delusion and Dreams
in "The Gradiva" by Jensen; "A Childhood Memory" of Leonardo da Vinci;
"The Moses" of Michelangelo; A Childhood Memory of Goethe in "Poetry and
Truth"; and "Dostoyevsky and Parricide".
In
his book, Freud declares himself to be a layman in matters of art, a
layman who feels more attracted by the qualities of the artwork than by
its techniques. He is attracted by them because he feels overpowered by
them and what is intriguing to him is that they are beyond his
comprehension.
At
least he finds an explanation for this fascination, and this is what he
calls "the intention of the artist." By focusing on the artist, he
believes that they are neurotics fleeing from an unsatisfactory reality
and taking refuge in a fantasy world from which, unlike the mentally
ill, they can find their way back. For Freud, the sexuality of the
artist has a great influence, but he knows to admit that this is not the
only source of art and that psychoanalysis has not thrown any light on
the technique of art as such.
DOSTOYEVSKY AND PARRICIDE
Freud
distinguishes four facets in the rich personality of Dostoyevsky: the
poet, the neurotic, the moralist and the sinner. Of these, the last
three are the ones accessible to psychoanalysis as it lays down its arms
when faced with the first.
Regarding
the first three, Freud studied various aspects of the Russian writer's
life, which are: considering him a criminal, based on his literary
production; his Oedipus complex and his desire to kill his father, which
dwell deep within him; and the reaction that these desires produce in
him: epilepsy, which, in this case, Freud defines as being of the
affective type.
At
first, Freud is tempted to consider him a criminal, but he encounters
great resistance: Dostoyevsky harbors, unlike a criminal, a huge
capacity for love and a great need for love; he is an extremely kind and
humane man, even in circumstances in which he should feel hatred and
revenge. What moves Freud to think of Dostoyevsky as a criminal is his
choice of literary topics, in which he prefers selfish, violent and
murdering characters, as well as some real events from his life, one of
which was having sexually abused a prepubescent girl. His instinct for
destruction appears as oriented in his life against himself, and creates
a huge guilt complex in him.
Dostoyevsky's
case is complicated by the presence of his neurosis. Freud found that
this is the basis of his epilepsy. Dostoyevsky uses epilepsy as a means
to redeem his parricidal desires. This man, Dostoyevsky, is bisexual –
according to this study – with an Oedipus complex. Faced with this
problem, two alternatives are proposed: kill the father in order to
possess the mother, or play the female role in order to win over the
father. But they both lead to the same dead end, which is the
punishment he would receive were he to be discovered: castration. These
desires create a guilt complex in him that manifests itself in his
epileptic seizures, during which he felt a state similar to death. This
is what Freud deduces, basing himself inter alia on a peculiar fact:
his attacks began in real life beginning at age 18, after the murder of
his father.
HIS GREAT WORK:
THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV
Here
the aforementioned parricide is shown. Two brothers: one of them
commits the crime, and it is precisely this one that Dostoyevsky
attributes his illness to, as if to admit that the neurotic and
epileptic person in him was parricidal.
This
great work continues with the report to the courts and in it, the
famous mockery of Psychology, which is nothing but a cover-up of
Dostoyevsky’s true intentions. His mockery is aimed at the courts! He
cannot be mocking Psychology as this is only important to the person who
deeply desired the crime.
Dostoyevsky's
sympathy with the offender goes far beyond compassion. For him, the
criminal is like a savior: he takes upon himself the burden that
otherwise others would have had to bear. Moreover, one should be
grateful to him since if he had not done it, one would have had to.
In short, Freud opines: "There is identification on the basis of identical murderous impulses."
It
is beyond doubt, Freud is telling us, that his choice of literary
topics was based on this identification and he used it to bequeath us
his poetic confession.
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