B. The Work of Displacement
Another and probably no less significant
relation must have already forced itself upon our attention while we
were collecting examples of dream-condensation. We may have noticed that
these elements which obtrude themselves in the dream-content as its
essential components do not by any means play this same part in the
dream-thoughts. As a corollary to this, the converse of this statement
is also true. That which is obviously the essential content of the
dream-thoughts need not be represented at all in the dream. The dream
is, as it were, centred elsewhere; its content is arranged about
elements which do not constitute the central point of the
dream-thoughts. Thus, for example, in the dream of the botanical
monograph the central point of the dream- content is evidently the
element botanical; in the dream- thoughts, we are concerned with the
complications and conflicts resulting from services rendered between
colleagues which place them under mutual obligations; later on with the
reproach that I am in the habit of sacrificing too much time to my
hobbies; and the element botanical finds no place in this nucleus of the
dream- thoughts, unless it is loosely connected with it by antithesis,
for botany was never among my favourite subjects. In the Sappho- dream
of my patient, ascending and descending, being upstairs and down, is
made the central point; the dream, however, is concerned with the danger
of sexual relations with persons of low degree; so that only one of the
elements of the dream-thoughts seems to have found its way into the
dream-content, and this is unduly expanded. Again, in the dream of my
uncle, the fair beard, which seems to be its central point, appears to
have no rational connection with the desire for greatness which we have
recognized as the nucleus of the dream-thoughts. Such dreams very
naturally give us an impression of a displacement. In complete contrast
to these examples, the dream of Irma's injection shows that individual
elements may claim the same place in dream-formation as that which they
occupy in the dream-thoughts. The recognition of this new and utterly
inconstant relation between the dream- thoughts and the dream-content
will probably astonish us at first. If we find, in a psychic process of
normal life, that one idea has been selected from among a number of
others, and has acquired a particular emphasis in our consciousness, we
are wont to regard this as proof that a peculiar psychic value (a
certain degree of interest) attaches to the victorious idea. We now
discover that this value of the individual element in the dream-
thoughts is not retained in dream-formation, or is not taken into
account. For there is no doubt which of the elements of the dream-
thoughts are of the highest value; our judgment informs us immediately.
In dream-formation the essential elements, those that are emphasized by
intensive interest, may be treated as though they were subordinate,
while they are replaced in the dream by other elements, which were
certainly subordinate in the dream-thoughts. It seems at first as though
the psychic intensity * of individual ideas were of no account in their
selection for dream-formation, but only their greater or lesser
multiplicity of determination. One might be inclined to think that what
gets into the dream is not what is important in the dream-thoughts, but
what is contained in them several times over; but our understanding of
dream-formation is not much advanced by this assumption; to begin with,
we cannot believe that the two motives of multiple determination and
intrinsic value can influence the selection of the dream otherwise than
in the same direction. Those ideas in the dream-thoughts which are most
important are probably also those which recur most frequently, since the
individual dream-thoughts radiate from them as centres. And yet the
dream may reject these intensely emphasized and extensively reinforced
elements, and may take up into its content other elements which are only
extensively reinforced.
* The psychic intensity or value of an
idea- the emphasis due to interest- is of course to be distinguished
from perceptual or conceptual intensity.
This difficulty may be solved if we
follow up yet another impression received during the investigation of
the over- determination of the dream-content. Many readers of this
investigation may already have decided, in their own minds, that the
discovery of the multiple determination of the dream-elements is of no
great importance, because it is inevitable. Since in analysis we proceed
from the dream-elements, and register all the ideas which associate
themselves with these elements, is it any wonder that these elements
should recur with peculiar frequency in the thought-material obtained in
this manner? While I cannot admit the validity of this objection, I am
now going to say something that sounds rather like it: Among the
thoughts which analysis brings to light are many which are far removed
from the nucleus of the dream, and which stand out like artificial
interpolations made for a definite purpose. Their purpose may readily be
detected; they establish a connection, often a forced and far-fetched
connection, between the dream-content and the dream-thoughts, and in
many cases, if these elements were weeded out of the analysis, the
components of the dream-content would not only not be over-determined,
but they would not be sufficiently determined. We are thus led to the
conclusion that multiple determination, decisive as regards the
selection made by the dream, is perhaps not always a primary factor in
dream- formation, but is often a secondary product of a psychic force
which is as yet unknown to us. Nevertheless, it must be of importance
for the entrance of the individual elements into the dream, for we may
observe that, in cases where multiple determination does not proceed
easily from the dream-material, it is brought about with a certain
effort.
It now becomes very probable that a
psychic force expresses itself in the dream-work which, on the one hand,
strips the elements of the high psychic value of their intensity and, on
the other hand, by means of over-determination, creates new significant
values from elements of slight value, which new values then make their
way into the dream-content. Now if this is the method of procedure,
there has occurred in the process of dream-formation a transference and
displacement of the psychic intensities of the individual elements, from
which results the textual difference between the dream-content and the
thought- content. The process which we here assume to be operative is
actually the most essential part of the dream-work; it may fitly be
called dream-displacement. Dream-displacement and dream- condensation
are the two craftsmen to whom we may chiefly ascribe the structure of
the dream.
I think it will be easy to recognize the
psychic force which expresses itself in dream-displacement. The result
of this displacement is that the dream-content no longer has any
likeness to the nucleus of the dream-thoughts, and the dream reproduces
only a distorted form of the dream-wish in the unconscious. But we are
already acquainted with dream-distortion; we have traced it back to the
censorship which one psychic instance in the psychic life exercises over
another. Dream-displacement is one of the chief means of achieving this
distortion. Is fecit, cui profuit. * We must assume that
dream-displacement is brought about by the influence of this censorship,
the endopsychic defence. *(2)
* "The doer gained."
*(2) Since I regard the attribution of
dream-distortion to the censorship as the central point of my conception
of the dream, I will here quote the closing passage of a story, Traumen
wie Wachen, from Phantasien eines Realisten, by Lynkeus (Vienna, second
edition [1900]), in which I find this chief feature of my doctrine
reproduced:
"Concerning a man who possesses the
remarkable faculty of never dreaming nonsense...."
"Your marvellous faculty of dreaming as
if you were awake is based upon your virtues, upon your goodness, your
justice, and your love of truth; it is the moral clarity of your nature
which makes everything about you intelligible to me."
"But if I really give thought to the
matter," was the reply, "I almost believe that all men are made as I am,
and that no one ever dreams nonsense! A dream which one remembers so
distinctly that one can relate it afterwards, and which, therefore, is
no dream of delirium, always has a meaning; why, it cannot be otherwise!
For that which is in contradiction to itself can never be combined into
a whole. The fact that time and space are often thoroughly shaken up,
detracts not at all from the real content of the dream, because both are
without any significance whatever for its essential content. We often do
the same thing in waking life; think of fairy-tales, of so many bold and
pregnant creations of fantasy, of which only a foolish person would say:
'That is nonsense! For it isn't possible.'"
"If only it were always possible to
interpret dreams correctly, as you have just done with mine!" said the
friend.
"That is certainly not an easy task, but
with a little attention it must always be possible to the dreamer. You
ask why it is generally impossible? In your case there seems to be
something veiled in your dreams, something unchaste in a special and
exalted fashion, a certain secrecy in your nature, which it is difficult
to fathom; and that is why your dreams so often seem to be without
meaning, or even nonsensical. But in the profoundest sense, this is by
no means the case; indeed it cannot be, for a man is always the same
person, whether he wakes or dreams."
The manner in which the factors of
displacement, condensation and over-determination interact with one
another in dream-formation- which is the ruling factor and which the
subordinate one- all this will be reserved as a subject for later
investigation. In the meantime, we may state, is a second condition
which the elements that find their way into the dream must satisfy, that
they must be withdrawn from the resistance of the censorship. But
henceforth, in the interpretation of dreams, we shall reckon with
dream-displacement as an unquestionable fact.
Table of
Contents
THE DREAM-WORK
Condensation
I.
II. "A Beautiful Dream"
B. The Work of Displacement
C. The Means of Representation in Dreams
D. Regard for Representability
E. Representation in Dreams by Symbols: Some
Further Typical Dreams
The hat as the symbol of a man (of the male
genitals):
The little one as the genital organ. Being run
over as a symbol of sexual intercourse.
Representation of the genitals by buildings,
stairs, and shafts.
The male organ symbolized by persons and the
female by a landscape.
Castration dreams of children.
A modified staircase dream.
The sensation of reality and the
representation of repetition.
The question of symbolism in the dreams of
normal persons.
Dream of a chemist.
Examples- Arithmetic and Speech in Dreams
Absurd Dreams- Intellectual Performances in
Dreams
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
The Affects in Dreams
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
The Secondary Elaboration