CHAPTER 6 (part 1)
THE DREAM-WORK
All other previous attempts to solve the
problems of dreams have concerned themselves directly with the manifest
dream-content as it is retained in the memory. They have sought to obtain an
interpretation of the dream from this content, or, if they dispensed with an
interpretation, to base their conclusions concerning the dream on the evidence
provided by this content. We, however, are confronted by a different set of
data; for us a new psychic material interposes itself between the dream-content
and the results of our investigations: the latent dream-content, or
dream-thoughts, which are obtained only by our method. We develop the solution
of the dream from this latent content, and not from the manifest dream-content.
We are thus confronted with a new problem, an entirely novel task- that of
examining and tracing the relations between the latent dream-thoughts and the
manifest dream-content, and the processes by which the latter has grown out of
the former.
The dream-thoughts and the dream-content present themselves as two
descriptions of the same content in two different languages; or, to put it more
clearly, the dream-content appears to us as a translation of the dream-thoughts
into another mode of expression, whose symbols and laws of composition we must
learn by comparing the origin with the translation. The dream-thoughts we can
understand without further trouble the moment we have ascertained them. The
dream-content is, as it were, presented in hieroglyphics, whose symbols must be
translated, one by one, into the language of the dream-thoughts. It would of
course, be incorrect to attempt to read these symbols in accordance with their
values as pictures, instead of in accordance with their meaning as symbols. For
instance, I have before me a picture- puzzle (rebus)- a house, upon whose roof
there is a boat; then a single letter; then a running figure, whose head has
been omitted, and so on. As a critic I might be tempted to judge this
composition and its elements to be nonsensical. A boat is out of place on the
roof of a house, and a headless man cannot run; the man, too, is larger than
the house, and if the whole thing is meant to represent a landscape the single
letters have no right in it, since they do not occur in nature. A correct
judgment of the picture-puzzle is possible only if I make no such objections to
the whole and its parts, and if, on the contrary, I take the trouble to replace
each image by a syllable or word which it may represent by virtue of some allusion
or relation. The words thus put together are no longer meaningless, but might
constitute the most beautiful and pregnant aphorism. Now a dream is such a
picture-puzzle, and our predecessors in the art of dream- interpretation have
made the mistake of judging the rebus as an artistic composition. As such, of
course, it appears nonsensical and worthless.
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FREUD - AN EXPLORER OF WESTERN CULTURES HEADS FOR THE EXCAVATIONS
IN EGYPT
SCHORSKE CE
ACTES DE LA RECHERCHE EN SCIENCES SOCIALES
(95): 2-12 DEC 1992
Document type: Article Language: French Cited References: 0 Times Cited: 0
Publisher:
MAISON SCIENCES HOMME, PARIS
IDS Number: