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- Title
Il perturbante (1919) e i segreti nella famiglia Freud.
- Authors
Romano, Cesare
- Abstract
Freud's 1919 paper The Uncanny, written during troubled times after First World War and often considered problematic and confused, is discussed. This paper deals with the interpretation of E.T.A. Hoffmann's 1815 novel Der Sandmann, where the recurrent reference to the eyes is brought back by Freud to the castration complex. Discussing Kohon's (2016) paper on aesthetic experiences where he states that (whether for the writer-artist or the reader-spectator) these experiences will always be autobiographical, and Rand & Torok (1994) for whom Hoffmann's novel has no reference to castration but to a family secret, it is argued that Freud's concern with this novel could be unconsciously rooted in some family secrets related to his childhood that the little Sigmund was not able to uncover. Freud must have read the novel Der Sandmann autobiographically according to Kohon's theory. In reference to Jentsch's (1906) paper "On the Psychology of the Uncanny", where the source of the uncanny is seen in the intellectual uncertainty whether an object is alive or not, it is argued that this statement could have brought back unconscious memories of the brother Julius' death, from whom Freud would have protected himself moving to the castration topic. Some scholars found in Hoffmann's novel a hidden reference to the primal scene, that is another uncanny background in Freud's childhood. Another uncanny episode occurred to the little Sigmund when he lost his beloved nanny. It is argued that these three topics where the unconscious factors that compelled Freud to write about the uncanny choosing Hoffmann's novel.
- Publication
Psicoterapia e Scienze Umane, 2020, Vol 54, Issue 2, p235
- ISSN
0394-2864
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3280/PU2020-002004