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Jungian Analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2021

Carl R. Mueller*
Affiliation:
UCLA

Extract

There are at least two ways of approaching a literary work of art from the standpoint of psychology: first, by simply analyzing the characters through their words and actions as real people; and second, by treating the work as a dream turned inside out, in which each character is a facet, or refraction, of the dreamer's personality. The virtue of the second approach is that it objectifies the action to the degree that it is easier to treat the problem on a social rather than on an exclusively personal level. Outside of therapeutic analysis the aim of a psychological approach to art should not be to read the mind of the artist, but to read the work of art as a societal dream; not as personal pathology, but as social pathology.

The second approach is also more profitable in certain works that are manifestly dream-oriented on a societal level—such works, for example, as Faust II, Ibsen's late plays, Strindberg's expressionist works, and Albee's Tiny Alice.

Type
Analysis Issue
Copyright
Copyright © 1978 The Drama Review

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References

All Cops photographs are from a dress rehearsal.