Monday, April 13, 2009
Reflection From a LONG Time Ago
In class, many weeks ago, before spring break, the class split up into groups to do different types of critics on The Picture of Dorian Gray. My groups was psychoanalyze the characters in Dorian Gray, along with psychoanalysis of the author, Oscar Wilde. We discovered a whole different way to look at the text. Using Barry's Beginning Theory as a guide, we looked at the quote "Basil Hallward is what I think I am: Lord Henry what the world thinks me: Dorian what I would like to be" Attributing this to Freud, we thought that Lord Henry is the id, that he does anything that he feels good to do and therefore Oscar's id is manifested by the actions of Lord Henry. Lord Henry's way of like and the New Hedonism is extensions of the the id . Next, Dorian is the Ego of Oscar Wilde. He understands the needs of others, trying to satisfy the id, but take experiences and situations into consideration. (Dorian doing trying to appease Lord Henry). Finally, Basil is the Superego of Wilde. He is the moral compass and dictates what is right and wrong in the story by confronting Dorian.
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I liked that day... I think that was an interested way to apply the psychoanalytic critisicm on the book. I think that the quote on the back is very important to gaining a personal insight to the book as a whole and I think that the three characters in the book are indeed three separate parts of Wilde and that we can understnad more about him and his internal congflicts with life and homosexality by paying attention to that quote and the characteristics of Dorian, Basil, and Lord Henry in the novel.
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