VI. THE DREAM-WORK
(continued)
C. The Means of Representation in Dreams
Besides the two factors of condensation
and displacement in dreams, which we have found to be at work in the
transformation of the latent dream-material into the manifest
dream-content, we shall, in the course of this investigation, come upon
two further conditions which exercise an unquestionable influence over
the selection of the material that eventually appears in the dream. But
first, even at the risk of seeming to interrupt our progress, I shall
take a preliminary glance at the processes by which the interpretation
of dreams is accomplished. I do not deny that the best way of explaining
them, and of convincing the critic of their reliability, would be to
take a single dream as an example, to detail its interpretation, as I
did (in Chapter II) in the case of the dream of Irma's injection, but
then to assemble the dream-thoughts which I had discovered, and from
them to reconstruct the formation of the dream- that is to say, to
supplement dream-analysis by dream-synthesis. I have done this with
several specimens for my own instruction; but I cannot undertake to do
it here, as I am prevented by a number of considerations (relating to
the psychic material necessary for such a demonstration) such as any
right-thinking person would approve. In the analysis of dreams these
considerations present less difficulty, for an analysis may be
incomplete and still retain its value, even if it leads only a little
way into the structure of the dream. I do not see how a synthesis, to be
convincing, could be anything short of complete. I could give a complete
synthesis only of the dreams of such persons as are unknown to the
reading public. Since, however, neurotic patients are the only persons
who furnish me with the means of making such a synthesis, this part of
the description of dreams must be postponed until I can carry the
psychological explanation of the neuroses far enough to demonstrate
their relation to our subject. * This will be done elsewhere.
* I have since given the complete
analysis and synthesis of two dreams in the Bruchstuck einer
Hysterieanalyse, (1905) (Ges. Schriften, Vol. VIII). "Fragment of an
Analysis of a Case of Hysteria," translated by Strachey, Collected
Papers, Vol III, (Hogarth Press, London). O. Rank's analysis, Ein Traum
der sich selbst deutet, deserves mention as the most complete
interpretation of a comparatively long dream.
From my attempts to construct dreams
synthetically from their dream-thoughts, I know that the material which
is yielded by interpretation varies in value. Part of it consists of the
essential dream-thoughts, which would completely replace the dream and
would in themselves be a sufficient substitute for it, were there no
dream-censorship. To the other part, one is wont to ascribe slight
importance, nor does one set any value on the assertion that all these
thoughts have participated in the formation of the dream; on the
contrary, they may include notions which are associated with experiences
that have occurred subsequently to the dream, between the dream and the
interpretation. This part comprises not only all the connecting- paths
which have led from the manifest to the latent dream- content, but also
the intermediate and approximating associations by means of which one
has arrived at a knowledge of these connecting-paths during the work of
interpretation.
At this point we are interested
exclusively in the essential dream-thoughts. These commonly reveal
themselves as a complex of thoughts and memories of the most intricate
possible construction, with all the characteristics of the thought-
processes known to us in waking life. Not infrequently they are trains
of thought which proceed from more than one centre, but which are not
without points of contact; and almost invariably we find, along with a
train of thought, its contradictory counterpart, connected with it by
the association of contrast.
The individual parts of this complicated
structure naturally stand in the most manifold logical relations to one
another. They constitute foreground and background, digressions,
illustrations, conditions, lines of argument and objections. When the
whole mass of these dream-thoughts is subjected to the pressure of the
dream- work, during which the fragments are turned about, broken up and
compacted, somewhat like drifting ice, the question arises: What becomes
of the logical ties which had hitherto provided the framework of the
structure? What representation do if, because, as though, although,
either- or and all the other conjunctions, without which we cannot
understand a phrase or a sentence, receive in our dreams?
To begin with, we must answer that the
dream has at its disposal no means of representing these logical
relations between the dream-thoughts. In most cases it disregards all
these conjunctions, and undertakes the elaboration only of the material
content of the dream-thoughts. It is left to the interpretation of the
dream to restore the coherence which the dream-work has destroyed.
If dreams lack the ability to express
these relations, the psychic material of which they are wrought must be
responsible for this defect. As a matter of fact, the representative
arts- painting and sculpture- are similarly restricted, as compared with
poetry, which is able to employ speech; and here again the reason for
this limitation lies in the material by the elaboration of which the two
plastic arts endeavour to express something. Before the art of painting
arrived at an understanding of the laws of expression by which it is
bound, it attempted to make up for this deficiency. In old paintings
little labels hung out of the mouths of the persons represented, giving
in writing the speech which the artist despaired of expressing in the
picture.
Here, perhaps an objection will be
raised, challenging the assertion that our dreams dispense with the
representation of logical relations. There are dreams in which the most
complicated intellectual operations take place; arguments for and
against are adduced, jokes and comparisons are made, just as in our
waking thoughts. But here again appearances are deceptive; if the
interpretation of such dreams is continued it will be found that all
these things are dream-material, not the representation of intellectual
activity in the dream. The content of the dream- thoughts is reproduced
by the apparent thinking in our dreams, but not the relations of the
dream-thoughts to one another, in the determination of which relations
thinking consists. I shall give some examples of this. But the fact
which is most easily established is that all speeches which occur in
dreams, and which are expressly designated as such, are unchanged or
only slightly modified replicas of speeches which occur likewise among
the memories in the dream-material. Often the speech is only an allusion
to an event contained in the dream-thoughts; the meaning of the dream is
quite different.
However, I shall not dispute the fact
that even critical thought- activity, which does not simply repeat
material from the dream- thoughts, plays a part in dream-formation. I
shall have to explain the influence of this factor at the close of this
discussion. It will then become clear that this thought activity is
evoked not by the dream-thoughts, but by the dream itself, after it is,
in a certain sense, already completed.
Provisionally, then, it is agreed that
the logical relations between the dream-thoughts do not obtain any
particular representation in the dream. For instance, where there is a
contradiction in the dream, this is either a contradiction directed
against the dream itself or a contradiction contained in one of the
dream-thoughts; a contradiction in the dream corresponds with a
contradiction between the dream-thoughts only in the most indirect and
intermediate fashion.
But just as the art of painting finally
succeeded in depicting, in the persons represented, at least the
intentions behind their words- tenderness, menace, admonition, and the
like- by other means than by floating labels, so also the dream has
found it possible to render an account of certain of the logical
relations between its dream-thoughts by an appropriate modification of
the peculiar method of dream-representation. It will be found by
experience that different dreams go to different lengths in this
respect; while one dream will entirely disregard the logical structure
of its material, another attempts to indicate it as completely as
possible. In so doing, the dream departs more or less widely from the
text which it has to elaborate; and its attitude is equally variable in
respect to the temporal articulation of the dream-thoughts, if such has
been established in the unconscious (as, for example, in the dream of
Irma's injection).
But what are the means by which the
dream-work is enabled to indicate those relations in the dream-material
which are difficult to represent? I shall attempt to enumerate these,
one by one.
In the first place, the dream renders an
account of the connection which is undeniably present between all the
portions of the dream-thoughts by combining this material into a unity
as a situation or a proceeding. It reproduces logical connections in the
form of simultaneity; in this case it behaves rather like the painter
who groups together all the philosophers or poets in a picture of the
School of Athens, or Parnassus. They never were assembled in any hall or
on any mountain-top, although to the reflective mind they do constitute
a community.
The dream carries out in detail this mode
of representation. Whenever it shows two elements close together, it
vouches for a particularly intimate connection between their
corresponding representatives in the dream-thoughts. It is as in our
method of writing: to signifies that the two letters are to be
pronounced as one syllable; while t with o following a blank space
indicates that t is the last letter of one word and o the first letter
of another. Consequently, dream-combinations are not made up of
arbitrary, completely incongruous elements of the dream-material, but of
elements that are pretty intimately related in the dream- thoughts also.
For representing causal relations our
dreams employ two methods, which are essentially reducible to one. The
method of representation more frequently employed- in cases, for
example, where the dream-thoughts are to the effect: "Because this was
thus and thus, this and that must happen"- consists in making the
subordinate clause a prefatory dream and joining the principal clause on
to it in the form of the main dream. If my interpretation is correct,
the sequence may likewise be reversed. The principal clause always
corresponds to that part of the dream which is elaborated in the
greatest detail.
An excellent example of such a
representation of causality was once provided by a female patient, whose
dream I shall subsequently give in full. The dream consisted of a short
prologue, and of a very circumstantial and very definitely centred
dream-composition. I might entitle it "Flowery language." The
preliminary dream is as follows: She goes to the two maids in the
kitchen and scolds them for taking so long to prepare "a little bite of
food." She also sees a very large number of heavy kitchen utensils in
the kitchen turned upside down in order to drain, even heaped up in
stacks. The two maids go to fetch water, and have, as it were, to climb
into a river, which reaches up to the house or into the courtyard.
Then follows the main dream, which begins
as follows: She is climbing down from a height over a curiously shaped
trellis, and she is glad that her dress doesn't get caught anywhere,
etc. Now the preliminary dream refers to the house of the lady's
parents. The words which are spoken in the kitchen are words which she
has probably often heard spoken by her mother. The piles of clumsy pots
and pans are taken from an unpretentious hardware shop located in the
same house. The second part of this dream contains an allusion to the
dreamer's father, who was always pestering the maids, and who during a
flood- for the house stood close to the bank of the river- contracted a
fatal illness. The thought which is concealed behind the preliminary
dream is something like this: "Because I was born in this house, in such
sordid and unpleasant surroundings..." The main dream takes up the same
thought, and presents it in a form that has been altered by a wish-fulfilment:
"I am of exalted origin." Properly then: "Because I am of such humble
origin, the course of my life has been so and so."
As far as I can see, the division of a
dream into two unequal portions does not always signify a causal
relation between the thoughts of the two portions. It often seems as
though in the two dreams the same material were presented from different
points of view; this is certainly the case when a series of dreams,
dreamed the same night, end in a seminal emission, the somatic need
enforcing a more and more definite expression. Or the two dreams have
proceeded from two separate centres in the dream-material, and they
overlap one another in the content, so that the subject which in one
dream constitutes the centre cooperates in the other as an allusion, and
vice versa. But in a certain number of dreams the division into short
preliminary dreams and long subsequent dreams actually signifies a
causal relation between the two portions. The other method of
representing the causal relation is employed with less comprehensive
material, and consists in the transformation of an image in the dream
into another image, whether it be of a person or a thing. Only where
this transformation is actually seen occurring in the dream shall we
seriously insist on the causal relation; not where we simply note that
one thing has taken the place of another. I said that both methods of
representing the causal relation are really reducible to the same
method; in both cases causation is represented by succession, sometimes
by the succession of dreams, sometimes by the immediate transformation
of one image into another. In the great majority of cases, of course,
the causal relation is not represented at all, but is effaced amidst the
succession of elements that is unavoidable even in the dream-process.
Dreams are quite incapable of expressing
the alternative either- or; it is their custom to take both members of
this alternative into the same context, as though they had an equal
right to be there. A classic example of this is contained in the dream
of Irma's injection. Its latent thoughts obviously mean: I am not
responsible for the persistence of Irma's pains; the responsibility
rests either with her resistance to accepting the solution or with the
fact that she is living under unfavourable sexual conditions, which I am
unable to change, or her pains are not hysterical at all, but organic.
The dream, however, carries out all these possibilities, which are
almost mutually exclusive, and is quite ready to add a fourth solution
derived from the dream-wish. After interpreting the dream, I then
inserted the either- or in its context in the dream-thoughts.
But when in narrating a dream the
narrator is inclined to employ the alternative either- or: "It was
either a garden or a living- room," etc., there is not really an
alternative in the dream- thoughts, but an and- a simple addition. When
we use either- or we are as a rule describing a quality of vagueness in
some element of the dream, but a vagueness which may still be cleared
up. The rule to be applied in this case is as follows: The individual
members of the alternative are to be treated as equal and connected by
an and. For instance, after waiting long and vainly for the address of a
friend who is travelling in Italy, I dream that I receive a telegram
which gives me the address. On the telegraph form I see printed in blue
letters: the first word is blurred- perhaps via or villa; the second is
distinctly Sezerno, or even (Casa). The second word, which reminds me of
Italian names, and of our discussions on etymology, also expresses my
annoyance in respect of the fact that my friend has kept his address a
secret from me; but each of the possible first three words may be
recognized on analysis as an independent and equally justifiable
starting-point in the concatenation of ideas.
During the night before the funeral of my
father I dreamed of a printed placard, a card or poster rather like the
notices in the waiting-rooms of railway stations which announce that
smoking is prohibited. The sign reads either:
You are requested to shut the eyes
or
You are requested to shut one eye
an alternative which I am in the habit of
representing in the following form:
- the
You are requested to shut eye(s).
- one
Each of the two versions has its special
meaning, and leads along particular paths in the dream-interpretation. I
had made the simplest possible funeral arrangements, for I knew what the
deceased thought about such matters. Other members of the family,
however, did not approve of such puritanical simplicity; they thought we
should feel ashamed in the presence of the other mourners. Hence one of
the wordings of the dream asks for the shutting of one eye, that is to
say, it asks that people should show consideration. The significance of
the vagueness, which is here represented by an either- or, is plainly to
be seen. The dream-work has not succeeded in concocting a coherent and
yet ambiguous wording for the dream-thoughts. Thus the two principal
trains of thought are separated from each other, even in the
dream-content.
In some few cases the division of a dream
into two equal parts expresses the alternative which the dream finds it
so difficult to present.
The attitude of dreams to the category of
antithesis and contradiction is very striking. This category is simply
ignored; the word No does not seem to exist for a dream. Dreams are
particularly fond of reducing antitheses to uniformity. or representing
them as one and the same thing. Dreams likewise take the liberty of
representing any element whatever by its desired opposite, so that it is
at first impossible to tell, in respect of any element which is capable
of having an opposite, whether it is contained in the dream-thoughts in
the negative or the positive sense. * In one of the recently cited
dreams, whose introductory portion we have already interpreted ("because
my origin is so and so"), the dreamer climbs down over a trellis, and
holds a blossoming bough in her hands. Since this picture suggests to
her the angel in paintings of the Annunciation (her own name is Mary)
bearing a lily-stem in his hand, and the white- robed girls walking in
procession on Corpus Christi Day, when the streets are decorated with
green boughs, the blossoming bough in the dream is quite clearly an
allusion to sexual innocence. But the bough is thickly studded with red
blossoms, each of which resembles a camellia. At the end of her walk (so
the dream continues) the blossoms are already beginning to fall; then
follow unmistakable allusions to menstruation. But this very bough,
which is carried like a lily-stem and as though by an innocent girl, is
also an allusion to Camille, who, as we know, usually wore a white
camellia, but a red one during menstruation. The same blossoming bough
("the flower of maidenhood" in Goethe's songs of the miller's daughter)
represents at once sexual innocence and its opposite. Moreover, the same
dream, which expresses the dreamer's joy at having succeeded in passing
through life unsullied, hints in several places (as in the falling of
the blossom) at the opposite train of thought, namely, that she had been
guilty of various sins against sexual purity (that is, in her
childhood). In the analysis of the dream we may clearly distinguish the
two trains of thought, of which the comforting one seems to be
superficial, and the reproachful one more profound. The two are
diametrically opposed to each other, and their similar yet contrasting
elements have been represented by identical dream-elements.
* From a work of K. Abel's, Der Gegensinn
der Urworte, (1884), see my review of it in the Bleuler-Freud Jahrbuch,
ii (1910) (Ges. Schriften Vol. X). I learned the surprising fact, which
is confirmed by other philologists, that the oldest languages behaved
just as dreams do in this regard. They had originally only one word for
both extremes in a series of qualities or activities (strong- weak, old-
young, far- near, bind- separate), and formed separate designations for
the two opposites only secondarily, by slight modifications of the
common primitive word. Abel demonstrates a very large number of those
relationships in ancient Egyptian, and points to distinct remnants of
the same development in the Semitic and Indo-Germanic languages.
The mechanism of dream-formation is
favourable in the highest degree to only one of the logical relations.
This relation is that of similarity, agreement, contiguity, just as; a
relation which may be represented in our dreams, as no other can be, by
the most varied expedients. The screening which occurs in the
dream-material, or the cases of just as are the chief points of support
for dream-formation, and a not inconsiderable part of the dream-work
consists in creating new screenings of this kind in cases where those
that already exist are prevented by the resistance of the censorship
from making their way into the dream. The effort towards condensation
evinced by the dream-work facilitates the representation of a relation
of similarity.
Similarity, agreement, community, are
quite generally expressed in dreams by contraction into a unity, which
is either already found in the dream-material or is newly created. The
first case may be referred to as identification, the second as
composition. Identification is used where the dream is concerned with
persons, composition where things constitute the material to be unified;
but compositions are also made of persons. Localities are often treated
as persons.
Identification consists in giving
representation in the dream- content to only one of two or more persons
who are related by some common feature, while the second person or other
persons appear to be suppressed as far as the dream is concerned. In the
dream this one "screening" person enters into all the relations and
situations which derive from the persons whom he screens. In cases of
composition, however, when persons are combined, there are already
present in the dream-image features which are characteristic of, but not
common to, the persons in question, so that a new unity, a composite
person, appears as the result of the union of these features. The
combination itself may be effected in various ways. Either the
dream-person bears the name of one of the persons to whom he refers- and
in this case we simply know, in a manner that is quite analogous to
knowledge in waking life, that this or that person is intended- while
the visual features belong to another person; or the dream-image itself
is compounded of visual features which in reality are derived from the
two. Also, in place of the visual features, the part played by the
second person may be represented by the attitudes and gestures which are
usually ascribed to him by the words he speaks, or by the situations in
which he is placed. In this latter method of characterization the sharp
distinction between the identification and the combination of persons
begins to disappear. But it may also happen that the formation of such a
composite person is unsuccessful. The situations or actions of the dream
are then attributed to one person, and the other- as a rule the more
important- is introduced as an inactive spectator. Perhaps the dreamer
will say: "My mother was there too" (Stekel). Such an element of the
dream-content is then comparable to a determinative in hieroglyphic
script which is not meant to be expressed, but is intended only to
explain another sign.
The common feature which justifies the
union of two persons- that is to say, which enables it to be made- may
either be represented in the dream or it may be absent. As a rule,
identification or composition of persons actually serves to avoid the
necessity of representing this common feature. Instead of repeating: "A
is ill- disposed towards me, and so is B," I make, in my dream, a
composite person of A and B; or I conceive A as doing something which is
alien to his character, but which is characteristic of B. The
dream-person obtained in this way appears in the dream in some new
connection, and the fact that he signifies both A and B justifies my
inserting that which is common to both persons- their hostility towards
me- at the proper place in the dream- interpretation. In this manner I
often achieve a quite extraordinary degree of condensation of the
dream-content; I am able to dispense with the direct representation of
the very complicated relations belonging to one person, if I can find a
second person who has an equal claim to some of these relations. It will
be readily understood how far this representation by means of
identification may circumvent the censoring resistance which sets up
such harsh conditions for the dream-work. The thing that offends the
censorship may reside in those very ideas which are connected in the
dream-material with the one person; I now find a second person, who
likewise stands in some relation to the objectionable material, but only
to a part of it. Contact at that one point which offends the censorship
now justifies my formation of a composite person, who is characterized
by the indifferent features of each. This person, the result of
combination or identification, being free of the censorship, is now
suitable for incorporation in the dream-content. Thus, by the
application of dream-condensation, I have satisfied the demands of the
dream- censorship.
When a common feature of two persons is
represented in a dream, this is usually a hint to look for another
concealed common feature, the representation of which is made impossible
by the censorship. Here a displacement of the common feature has
occurred, which in some degree facilitates representation. From the
circumstance that the composite person is shown to me in the dream with
an indifferent common feature, I must infer that another common feature
which is by no means indifferent exists in the dream-thoughts.
Accordingly, the identification or
combination of persons serves various purposes in our dreams; in the
first place, that of representing a feature common to two persons;
secondly, that of representing a displaced common feature; and, thirdly,
that of expressly a community of features which is merely wished for. As
the wish for a community of features in two persons often coincides with
the interchanging of these persons, this relation also is expressed in
dreams by identification. In the dream of Irma's injection I wish to
exchange one patient for another- that is to say, I wish this other
person to be my patient, as the former person has been; the dream deals
with this wish by showing me a person who is called Irma, but who is
examined in a position such as I have had occasion to see only the other
person occupy. In the dream about my uncle this substitution is made the
centre of the dream; I identify myself with the minister by judging and
treating my colleagues as shabbily as lie does.
It has been my experience- and to this I
have found no exception- that every dream treats of oneself. Dreams are
absolutely egoistic. * In cases where not my ego but only a strange
person occurs in the dream-content, I may safely assume that by means of
identification my ego is concealed behind that person. I am permitted to
supplement my ego. On other occasions, when my ego appears in the dream,
the situation in which it is placed tells me that another person is
concealing himself, by means of identification, behind the ego. In this
case I must be prepared to find that in the interpretation I should
transfer something which is connected with this person- the hidden
common feature- to myself. There are also dreams in which my ego appears
together with other persons who, when the identification is resolved,
once more show themselves to be my ego. Through these identifications I
shall then have to connect with my ego certain ideas to which the
censorship has objected. I may also give my ego multiple representation
in my dream, either directly or by means of identification with other
people. By means of several such identifications an extraordinary amount
of thought material may be condensed. *(2) That one's ego should appear
in the same dream several times or in different forms is fundamentally
no more surprising than that it should appear, in conscious thinking,
many times and in different places or in different relations: as, for
example, in the sentence: "When I think what a healthy child I was."
* Cf. here the observations made in
chapter V.
*(2) If I do not know behind which of the
persons appearing in the dream I am to look for my ego. I observe the
following rule: That person in the dream who is subject to an emotion
which I am aware of while asleep is the one that conceals my ego.
Still easier than in the case of persons
is the resolution of identifications in the case of localities
designated by their own names, as here the disturbing influence of the
all-powerful ego is lacking. In one of my dreams of Rome (chapter V.,
B.) the name of the place in which I find myself is Rome: I am
surprised, however, by a large number of German placards at a street
corner. This last is a wish-fulfilment, which immediately suggests
Prague; the wish itself probably originated at a period of my youth when
I was imbued with a German nationalistic spirit which today is quite
subdued. At the time of my dream I was looking forward to meeting a
friend in Prague; the identification of Rome with Prague is therefore
explained by a desired common feature; I would rather meet my friend in
Rome than in Prague; for the purpose of this meeting I should like to
exchange Prague for Rome.
The possibility of creating composite
formations is one of the chief causes of the fantastic character so
common in dreams. in that it introduces into the dream-content elements
which could never have been objects of perception. The psychic process
which occurs in the creation of composite formations is obviously the
same as that which we employ in conceiving or figuring a dragon or a
centaur in our waking senses. The only difference is that, in the
fantastic creations of waking life, the impression intended is itself
the decisive factor, while the composite formation in the dream is
determined by a factor- the common feature in the dream-thoughts- which
is independent of its form. Composite formations in dreams may be
achieved in a great many different ways. In the most artless of these
methods, only the properties of the one thing are represented, and this
representation is accompanied by a knowledge that they refer to another
object also. A more careful technique combines features of the one
object with those of the other in a new image, while it makes skillful
use of any really existing resemblances between the two objects. The new
creation may prove to be wholly absurd, or even successful as a
phantasy, according as the material and the wit employed in constructing
it may permit. If the objects to be condensed into a unity are too
incongruous, the dream-work is content with creating a composite
formation with a comparatively distinct nucleus, to which are attached
more indefinite modifications. The unification into one image has here
been to some extent unsuccessful; the two representations overlap one
another, and give rise to something like a contest between the visual
images. Similar representations might be obtained in a drawing if one
were to attempt to give form to a unified abstraction of disparate
perceptual images.
Dreams naturally abound in such composite
formations; I have given several examples of these in the dreams already
analysed, and will now cite more such examples. In the dream earlier in
this chapter which describes the career of my patient in flowery
language, the dream-ego carries a spray of blossoms in her hand which,
as we have seen, signifies at once sexual innocence and sexual
transgression. Moreover, from the manner in which the blossoms are set
on, they recall cherry-blossom; the blossoms themselves, considered
singly, are camellias, and finally the whole spray gives the dreamer the
impression of an exotic plant. The common feature in the elements of
this composite formation is revealed by the dream-thoughts. The
blossoming spray is made up of allusions to presents by which she was
induced or was to have been induced to behave in a manner agreeable to
the giver. So it was with cherries in her childhood, and with a
camellia-tree in her later years; the exotic character is an allusion to
a much- travelled naturalist, who sought to win her favour by means of a
drawing of a flower. Another female patient contrives a composite mean
out of bathing machines at a seaside resort, country privies, and the
attics of our city dwelling-houses. A reference to human nakedness and
exposure is common to the first two elements; and we may infer from
their connection with the third element that (in her childhood) the
garret was likewise the scene of bodily exposure. A dreamer of the male
sex makes a composite locality out of two places in which "treatment" is
given- my office and the assembly rooms in which he first became
acquainted with his wife. Another, a female patient, after her elder
brother has promised to regale her with caviar, dreams that his legs are
covered all over with black beads of caviar. The two elements, taint in
a moral sense and the recollection of a cutaneous eruption in childhood
which made her legs look as though studded over with red instead of
black spots, have here combined with the beads of caviar to form a new
idea- the idea of what she gets from her brother. In this dream parts of
the human body are treated as objects, as is usually the case in dreams.
In one of the dreams recorded by Ferenczi there occurs a composite
formation made up of the person of a physician and a horse, and this
composite being wears a night-shirt. The common feature in these three
components was revealed in the analysis, after the nightshirt had been
recognized as an allusion to the father of the dreamer in a scene of
childhood. In each of the three cases there was some object of her
sexual curiosity. As a child she had often been taken by her nurse to
the army stud, where she had the amplest opportunity to satisfy her
curiosity, at that time still uninhibited.
I have already stated that the dream has
no means of expressing the relation of contradiction, contrast,
negation. I shall now contradict this assertion for the first time. A
certain number of cases of what may be summed up under the word contrast
obtain representation, as we have seen, simply by means of
identification- that is when an exchange, a substitution, can be bound
up with the contrast. Of this we have cited repeated examples. Certain
other of the contrasts in the dream-thoughts, which perhaps come under
the category of inverted, united into the opposite, are represented in
dreams in the following remarkable manner, which may almost be described
as witty. The inversion does not itself make its way into the
dream-content, but manifests its presence in the material by the fact
that a part of the already formed dream-content which is, for other
reasons, closely connected in context is- as it were subsequently-
inverted. It is easier to illustrate this process than to describe it.
In the beautiful "Up and Down" dream (this chapter, A.), the
dream-representation of ascending is an inversion of its prototype in
the dream-thoughts: that is, of the introductory scene of Daudet's
Sappho; in the dream, climbing is difficult at first and easy later on,
whereas, in the novel, it is easy at first, and later becomes more and
more difficult. Again, above and below, with reference to the dreamer's
brother, are reversed in the dream. This points to a relation of
inversion or contrast between two parts of the material in the
dream-thoughts, which indeed we found in them, for in the childish
phantasy of the dreamer he is carried by his nurse, while in the novel,
on the contrary, the hero carries his beloved. My dream of Goethe's
attack on Herr M (to be cited later) likewise contains an inversion of
this sort, which must be set right before the dream can be interpreted.
In this dream, Goethe attacks a young man, Herr M; the reality, as
contained in the dream-thoughts, is that an eminent man, a friend of
mine, has been attacked by an unknown young author. In the dream I
reckon time from the date of Goethe's death; in reality the reckoning
was made from the year in which the paralytic was born. The thought
which influences the dream-material reveals itself as my opposition to
the treatment of Goethe as though he were a lunatic. "It is the other
way about," says the dream; "if you don't understand the book it is you
who are feeble-minded, not the author." All these dreams of inversion,
moreover, seem to me to imply an allusion to the contemptuous phrase,
"to turn one's back upon a person" (German: einem die Kehrseite zeigen,
lit. to show a person one's backside): cf. the inversion in respect of
the dreamer's brother in the Sappho dream. It is further worth noting
how frequently inversion is employed in precisely those dreams which are
inspired by repressed homosexual impulses.
Moreover, inversion, or transformation
into the opposite, is one of the most favoured and most versatile
methods of representation which the dream-work has at its disposal. It
serves, in the first place, to enable the wish-fulfilment to prevail
against a definite element of the dream-thoughts. "If only it were the
other way about!" is often the best expression for the reaction of the
ego against a disagreeable recollection. But inversion becomes
extraordinarily useful in the service of the censorship, for it effects,
in the material to be represented, a degree of distortion which at first
simply paralyses our understanding of the dream. It is therefore always
permissible, if a dream stubbornly refuses to surrender its meaning, to
venture on the experimental inversion of definite portions of its
manifest content. Then, not infrequently, everything becomes clear.
Besides the inversion of content, the
temporal inversion must not be overlooked. A frequent device of
dream-distortion consists in presenting the final issue of the event or
the conclusion of the train of thought at the beginning of the dream,
and appending at the end of the dream the premises of the conclusion, or
the causes of the event. Anyone who forgets this technical device of
dream-distortion stands helpless before the problem of dream-
interpretation. *
* The hysterical attack often employs the
same device of temporal inversion in order to conceal its meaning from
the observer. The attack of a hysterical girl, for example, consists in
enacting a little romance, which she has imagined in the unconscious in
connection with an encounter in a tram. A man, attracted by the beauty
of her foot, addresses her while she is reading, whereupon she goes with
him and a passionate love-scene ensues. Her attack begins with the
representation of this scene by writhing movements of the body
(accompanied by movements of the lips and folding of the arms to signify
kisses and embraces), whereupon she hurries into the next room, sits
down on a chair, lifts her skirt in order to show her foot, acts as
though she were about to read a book, and speaks to me (answers me). Cf.
the observation of Artemidorus: "In interpreting dream-stories, one must
consider them the first time from the beginning to the end, and the
second time from the end to the beginning."
In many cases, indeed, we discover the
meaning of the dream only when we have subjected the dream-content to a
multiple inversion, in accordance with the different relations. For
example, in the dream of a young patient who is suffering from
obsessional neurosis, the memory of the childish death-wish directed
against a dreaded father concealed itself behind the following words:
His father scolds him because he comes home so late, but the context of
the psycho-analytic treatment and the impressions of the dreamer show
that the sentence must be read as follows: He is angry with his father,
and further, that his father always came home too early (i.e., too
soon). He would have preferred that his father should not come home at
all, which is identical with the wish (see chapter V., D.) that his
father would die. As a little boy, during the prolonged absence of his
father, the dreamer was guilty of a sexual aggression against another
child, and was punished by the threat: "Just you wait until your father
comes home!"
If we should seek to trace the relations
between the dream- content and the dream-thoughts a little farther, we
shall do this best by making the dream itself our point of departure,
and asking ourselves: What do certain formal characteristics of the
dream-presentation signify in relation to the dream-thoughts? First and
foremost among the formal characteristics which are bound to impress us
in dreams are the differences in the sensory intensity of the single
dream-images, and in the distinctness of various parts of the dream, or
of whole dreams as compared with one another. The differences in the
intensity of individual dream- images cover the whole gamut, from a
sharpness of definition which one is inclined- although without warrant-
to rate more highly than that of reality, to a provoking indistinctness
which we declare to be characteristic of dreams, because it really is
not wholly comparable to any of the degrees of indistinctness which we
occasionally perceive in real objects. Moreover, we usually describe the
impression which we receive of an indistinct object in a dream as
fleeting, while we think of the more distinct dream-images as having
been perceptible also for a longer period of time. We must now ask
ourselves by what conditions in the dream-material these differences in
the distinctness of the individual portions of the dream-content are
brought about.
Before proceeding farther, it is
necessary to deal with certain expectations which seem to be almost
inevitable. Since actual sensations experienced during sleep may
constitute part of the dream-material, it will probably be assumed that
these sensations, or the dream-elements resulting from them, are
emphasized by a special intensity, or conversely, that anything which is
particularly vivid in the dream can probably be traced to such real
sensations during sleep. My experience, however, has never confirmed
this. It is not true that those elements of a dream which are
derivatives of real impressions perceived in sleep (nerve stimuli) are
distinguished by their special vividness from others which are based on
memories. The factor of reality is inoperative in determining the
intensity of dream- images.
Further, it might be expected that the
sensory intensity (vividness) of single dream-images is in proportion to
the psychic intensity of the elements corresponding to them in the
dream-thoughts. In the latter, intensity is identical with psychic
value; the most intense elements are in fact the most significant, and
these constitute the central point of the dream- thoughts. We know,
however, that it is precisely these elements which are usually not
admitted to the dream-content, owing to the vigilance of the censorship.
Still, it might be possible for their most immediate derivatives, which
represent them in the dream, to reach a higher degree of intensity
without, however, for that reason constituting the central point of the
dream- representation. This assumption also vanishes as soon as we
compare the dream and the dream-material. The intensity of the elements
in the one has nothing to do with the intensity of the elements in the
other; as a matter of fact, a complete transvaluation of all psychic
values takes place between the dream-material and the dream. The very
element of the dream which is transient and hazy, and screened by more
vigorous images, is often discovered to be the one and only direct
derivative of the topic that completely dominates the dream-thoughts.
The intensity of the dream-elements
proves to be determined in a different manner: that is, by two factors
which are mutually independent. It will readily be understood that,
those elements by means of which the wish-fulfilment expresses itself
are those which are intensely represented. But analysis tells us that
from the most vivid elements of the dream the greatest number of trains
of thought proceed, and that those which are most vivid are at the same
time those which are best determined. No change of meaning is involved
if we express this latter empirical proposition in the following
formula: The greatest intensity is shown by those elements of the dream
for whose formation the most extensive condensation-work was required.
We may, therefore, expect that it will be possible to express this
condition, as well as the other condition of the wish-fulfilment, in a
single formula.
I must utter a warning that the problem
which I have just been considering- the causes of the greater or lesser
intensity or distinctness of single elements in dreams- is not to be
confounded with the other problem- that of variations in the
distinctness of whole dreams or sections of dreams. In the former case
the opposite of distinctness is haziness; in the latter, confusion. It
is, of course, undeniable that in both scales the two kinds of
intensities rise and fall in unison. A portion of the dream which seems
clear to us usually contains vivid elements; an obscure dream, on the
contrary, is composed of less vivid elements. But the problem offered by
the scale of definition, which ranges from the apparently clear to the
indistinct or confused, is far more complicated than the problem of
fluctuations in vividness of the dream-elements. For reasons which will
be given later, the former cannot at this stage be further discussed. In
isolated cases one observes, not without surprise, that the impression
of distinctness or indistinctness produced by a dream has nothing to do
with the dream-structure, but proceeds from the dream-material, as one
of its ingredients. Thus, for example, I remember a dream which on
waking seemed so particularly well-constructed, flawless and clear that
I made up my mind, while I was still in a somnolent state, to admit a
new category of dreams- those which had not been subject to the
mechanism of condensation and distortion, and which might thus be
described as phantasies during sleep. A closer examination, however,
proved that this unusual dream suffered from the same structural flaws
and breaches as exist in all other dreams; so I abandoned the idea of a
category of dream-phantasies. * The content of the dream, reduced to its
lowest terms, was that I was expounding to a friend a difficult and
long-sought theory of bisexuality, and the wish-fulfilling power of the
dream was responsible for the fact that this theory (which, by the way,
was not communicated in the dream) appeared to be so lucid and flawless.
Thus, what I believed to be a judgment as regards the finished dream was
a part, and indeed the most essential part, of the dream-content. Here
the dream-work reached out, as it were, into my first waking thoughts,
and presented to me, in the form of a judgment of the dream, that part
of the dream-material which it had failed to represent with precision in
the dream. I was once confronted with the exact counterpart of this case
by a female patient who at first absolutely declined to relate a dream
which was necessary for the analysis "because it was so hazy and
confused," and who finally declared, after repeatedly protesting the
inaccuracy of her description, that it seemed to her that several
persons- herself, her husband, and her father- had occurred in the
dream, and that she had not known whether her husband was her father, or
who really was her father, or something of that sort. Comparison of this
dream with the ideas which occurred to the dreamer in the course of the
sitting showed beyond a doubt that it dealt with the rather commonplace
story of a maidservant who has to confess that she is expecting a child,
and hears doubts expressed as to "who the father really is." *(2) The
obscurity manifested by this dream, therefore, was once more a portion
of the dream-exciting material. A fragment of this material was
represented in the form of the dream. The form of the dream or of
dreaming is employed with astonishing frequency to represent the
concealed content.
* I do not know today whether I was
justified in doing so.
*(2) Accompanying hysterical symptoms;
amenorrhoea and profound depression were the chief troubles of this
patient.
Glosses on the dream, and seemingly
harmless comments on it, often serve in the most subtle manner to
conceal- although, of course, they really betray- a part of what is
dreamed. As, for example, when the dreamer says: Here the dream was
wiped out, and the analysis gives an infantile reminiscence of listening
to someone cleaning himself after defecation. Or another example, which
deserves to be recorded in detail: A young man has a very distinct
dream, reminding him of phantasies of his boyhood which have remained
conscious. He found himself in a hotel at a seasonal resort; it was
night; he mistook the number of his room, and entered a room in which an
elderly lady and her two daughters were undressing to go to bed. He
continues: "Then there are some gaps in the dream; something is missing;
and at the end there was a man in the room, who wanted to throw me out,
and with whom I had to struggle." He tries in vain to recall the content
and intention of the boyish phantasy to which the dream obviously
alluded. But we finally become aware that the required content had
already been given in his remarks concerning the indistinct part of the
dream. The gaps are the genital apertures of the women who are going to
bed: Here something is missing describes the principal characteristic of
the female genitals. In his young days he burned with curiosity to see
the female genitals, and was still inclined to adhere to the infantile
sexual theory which attributes a male organ to women.
A very similar form was assumed in an
analogous reminiscence of another dreamer. He dreamed: I go with
Fraulein K into the restaurant of the Volksgarten... then comes a dark
place, an interruption... then I find myself in the salon of a brothel,
where I see two or three women, one in a chemise and drawers.
Analysis. Fraulein K is the daughter of
his former employer; as he himself admits, she was a sister-substitute.
He rarely had the opportunity of talking to her, but they once had a
conversation in which "one recognized one's sexuality, so to speak, as
though one were to say: I am a man and you are a woman." He had been
only once to the above-mentioned restaurant, when he was accompanied by
the sister of his brother-in-law, a girl to whom he was quite
indifferent. On another occasion he accompanied three ladies to the door
of the restaurant. The ladies were his sister, his sister-in-law, and
the girl already mentioned. He was perfectly indifferent to all three of
them, but they all belonged to the sister category. He had visited a
brothel but rarely, perhaps two or three times in his life.
The interpretation is based on the dark
place, the interruption in the dream, and informs us that on occasion,
but in fact only rarely, obsessed by his boyish curiosity, he had
inspected the genitals of his sister, a few years his junior. A few days
later the misdemeanor indicated in the dream recurred to his conscious
memory.
All dreams of the same night belong, in
respect of their content, to the same whole; their division into several
parts, their grouping and number, are all full of meaning and may be
regarded as pieces of information about the latent dream-thoughts. In
the interpretation of dreams consisting of several main sections, or of
dreams belonging to the same night, we must not overlook the possibility
that these different and successive dreams mean the same thing,
expressing the same impulses in different material. That one of these
homologous dreams which comes first in time is usually the most
distorted and most bashful, while the next dream is bolder and more
distinct.
Even Pharaoh's dream of the ears and the
kine, which Joseph interpreted, was of this kind. It is given by
Josephus in greater detail than in the Bible. After relating the first
dream, the King said: "After I had seen this vision I awaked out of my
sleep, and, being in disorder, and considering with myself what this
appearance should be, I fell asleep again, and saw another dream much
more wonderful than the foregoing, which still did more affright and
disturb me." After listening to the relation of the dream, Joseph said:
"This dream, O King, although seen under two forms, signifies one and
the same event of things." *
* Josephus; Antiquities of the Jews, book
II, chap. V, trans. by Wm. Whitson (David McKay, Philadelphia).
Jung, in his Beitrag zur Psychologie des
Geruchtes, relates how a veiled erotic dream of a schoolgirl was
understood by her friends without interpretation, and continued by them
with variations, and he remarks, with reference to one of these narrated
dreams, that "the concluding idea of a long series of dream-images had
precisely the same content as the first image of the series had
endeavoured to represent. The censorship thrust the complex out of the
way as long as possible by a constant renewal of symbolic screenings,
displacements, transformations into something harmless, etc." Scherner
was well acquainted with this peculiarity of dream-representation, and
describes it in his Leben des Traumes (p. 166) in terms of a special law
in the Appendix to his doctrine of organic stimulation: "But finally, in
all symbolic dream-formations emanating from definite nerve stimuli, the
phantasy observes the general law that at the beginning of the dream it
depicts the stimulating object only by the remotest and freest
allusions, but towards the end, when the graphic impulse becomes
exhausted, the stimulus itself is nakedly represented by its appropriate
organ or its function; whereupon the dream, itself describing its
organic motive, achieves its end...."
A pretty confirmation of this law of
Scherner's has been furnished by Otto Rank in his essay: Ein Traum, der
sich selbst deutet. This dream, related to him by a girl, consisted of
two dreams of the same night, separated by an interval of time, the
second of which ended with an orgasm. It was possible to interpret this
orgastic dream in detail in spite of the few ideas contributed by the
dreamer, and the wealth of relations between the two dream-contents made
it possible to recognize that the first dream expressed in modest
language the same thing as the second, so that the latter- the orgastic
dream- facilitated a full explanation of the former. From this example,
Rank very justifiably argues the significance of orgastic dreams for the
theory of dreams in general.
But, in my experience, it is only in rare
cases that one is in a position to translate the lucidity or confusion
of a dream, respectively, into a certainty or doubt in the
dream-material. Later on I shall have to disclose a hitherto unmentioned
factor in dream-formation, upon whose operation this qualitative scale
in dreams is essentially dependent.
In many dreams in which a certain
situation and environment are preserved for some time, there occur
interruptions which may be described in the following words: "But then
it seemed as though it were, at the same time, another place, and there
such and such a thing happened." In these cases, what interrupts the
main action of the dream, which after a while may be continued again,
reveals itself in the dream-material as a subordinate clause, an
interpolated thought. Conditionality in the dream-thoughts is
represented by simultaneity in the dream-content (wenn or wann = if or
when, while).
We may now ask: What is the meaning of
the sensation of inhibited movement which so often occurs in dreams, and
is so closely allied to anxiety? One wants to move, and is unable to
stir from the spot; or wants to accomplish something, and encounters
obstacle after obstacle. The train is about to start. and one cannot
reach it; one's hand is raised to avenge an insult, and its strength
fails, etc. We have already met with this sensation in
exhibition-dreams, but have as yet made no serious attempt to interpret
it. It is convenient, but inadequate, to answer that there is motor
paralysis in sleep, which manifests itself by means of the sensation
alluded to. We may ask: Why is it, then, that we do not dream
continually of such inhibited movements? And we may permissibly suspect
that this sensation, which may at any time occur during sleep, serves
some sort of purpose for representation, and is evoked only when the
need of this representation is present in the dream-material.
Inability to do a thing does not always
appear in the dream as a sensation; it may appear simply as part of the
dream-content. I think one case of this kind is especially fitted to
enlighten us as to the meaning of this peculiarity. I shall give an
abridged version of a dream in which I seem to be accused of dishonesty.
The scene is a mixture made up of a private sanatorium and several other
places. A manservant appears, to summon me to an inquiry. I know in the
dream that something has been missed, and that the inquiry is taking
place because I am suspected of having appropriated the lost article.
Analysis shows that inquiry is to be taken in two senses; it includes
the meaning of medical examination. Being conscious of my innocence, and
my position as consultant in this sanatorium, I calmly follow the
manservant. We are received at the door by another manservant, who says,
pointing at me, "Have you brought him? Why, he is a respectable man."
Thereupon, and unattended, I enter a great hall where there are many
machines, which reminds me of an inferno with its hellish instruments of
punishment. I see a colleague strapped to an appliance; he has every
reason to be interested in my appearance, but he takes no notice of me.
I understand that I may now go. Then I cannot find my hat, and cannot go
after all.
The wish that the dream fulfils is
obviously the wish that my honesty shall be acknowledged, and that I may
be permitted to go; there must therefore be all sorts of material in the
dream- thoughts which comprise a contradiction of this wish. The fact
that I may go is the sign of my absolution; if, then, the dream provides
at its close an event which prevents me from going, we may readily
conclude that the suppressed material of the contradiction is asserting
itself in this feature. The fact that I cannot find my hat therefore
means: "You are not after all an honest man." The inability to do
something in the dream is the expression of a contradiction, a No; so
that our earlier assertion, to the effect that the dream is not capable
of expressing a negation, must be revised accordingly. *
* A reference to an experience of
childhood emerges, in the complete analysis, through the following
connecting-links: "The Moor has done his duty, the Moor can go." And
then follows the waggish question: "How old is the Moor when he has done
his duty?"- "A year, then he can go (walk)." (It is said that I came
into the world with so much black curly hair that my young mother
declared that I was a little Moor.) The fact that I cannot find my hat
is an experience of the day which has been exploited in various senses.
Our servant, who is a genius at stowing things away, had hidden the hat.
A rejection of melancholy thoughts of death is concealed behind the
conclusion of the dream: "I have not nearly done my duty yet; I cannot
go yet." Birth and death together- as in the dream of Goethe and the
paralytic, which was a little earlier in date.
In other dreams in which the inability to
do something occurs, not merely as a situation, but also as a sensation,
the same contradiction is more emphatically expressed by the sensation
of inhibited movement, or a will to which a counter-will is opposed.
Thus the sensation of inhibited movement represents a conflict of will.
We shall see later on that this very motor paralysis during sleep is one
of the fundamental conditions of the psychic process which functions
during dreaming. Now an impulse which is conveyed to the motor system is
none other than the will, and the fact that we are certain that the
impulse will be inhibited in sleep makes the whole process
extraordinarily well-adapted to the representation of a will towards
something and of a No which opposes itself thereto. From my explanation
of anxiety, it is easy to understand why the sensation of the inhibited
will is so closely allied to anxiety, and why it is so often connected
with it in dreams. Anxiety is a libidinal impulse which emanates from
the unconscious and is inhibited by the preconscious. * Therefore, when
a sensation of inhibition in the dream is accompanied by anxiety, the
dream must be concerned with a volition which was at one time capable of
arousing libido; there must be a sexual impulse.
* This theory is not in accordance with
more recent views.
As for the judgment which is often
expressed during a dream: "Of course, it is only a dream," and the
psychic force to which it may be ascribed, I shall discuss these
questions later on. For the present I will merely say that they are
intended to depreciate the importance of what is being dreamed. The
interesting problem allied to this, as to what is meant if a certain
content in the dream is characterized in the dream itself as having been
dreamed- the riddle of a dream within a dream- has been solved in a
similar sense by W. Stekel, by the analysis of some convincing examples.
Here again the part of the dream dreamed is to be depreciated in value
and robbed of its reality; that which the dreamer continues to dream
after waking from the dream within a dream is what the dream-wish
desires to put in place of the obliterated reality. It may therefore be
assumed that the part dreamed contains the representation of the
reality, the real memory, while, on the other hand, the continued dream
contains the representation of what the dreamer merely wishes. The
inclusion of a certain content in a dream within a dream is, therefore,
equivalent to the wish that what has been characterized as a dream had
never occurred. In other words: when a particular incident is
represented by the dream-work in a dream, it signifies the strongest
confirmation of the reality of this incident, the most emphatic
affirmation of it. The dream- work utilizes the dream itself as a form
of repudiation, and thereby confirms the theory that a dream is a
wish-fulfilment.
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