36 pages 1 hour read

Sigmund Freud

On Dreams

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1901

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Chapters 5-7Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Chapters 5-7 Summary and Analysis

Freud suggests that the work of interpreting and finding the dream thought is complex and challenging and is achieved only through intensive analysis. Dream thoughts are not explicitly present in the content of the dream and are often represented in obscure elements. In the dream, meaningful content and gratuitous content are given equal precedence. Dream displacement conceals meaningful content, hiding it amid unimportant elements. The more convoluted and stranger a dream seems the more displacement is occurring.

This relates to Freud’s earlier ideas about the three classes of dreams. In the second and third classes, dreams are more confusing and unintelligible. These types of dreams refer to repressed desires buried deep into the unconscious. They are distorted through complex symbols to remain concealed from the conscious mind. This corresponds with the theme Repression and the Unconscious, as well as Dreams as Expressions of Desire. The mind actively seeks ways to obscure repressed desires. Dream displacement plays a significant role in accomplishing this.

Dream displacement and condensation are essential elements in the creation of the dream.

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