To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Family romance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The family romance is a psychological complex identified by Sigmund Freud in an essay he wrote in 1909 entitled "The Family Romances." In it he describes various phases a child experiences as he or she must confront the fact that the parents are not wholly emotionally available. The child has asexual feelings of jealousy within the family, and as a defense the young child or adolescent fantasizes that they are really the children of parents of higher social standing than their actual parents. The fantasy avenges the child's hurt by positing a better family. Later, the child's jealousies will become more overtly sexual as he or she passes through various stages of Oedipal development. More broadly, the term can be used to cover the whole range of instinctual ties between siblings, and parents and children.[1]

Freud's thesis

Freud published a short piece on the Family Romance in Otto Rank's The Myth of the Birth of the Hero (1908) – the study later appearing separately in print both in German and in English.[2] Freud had anticipated the theme in the 1890s, in a private reflection on Conrad Ferdinand Meyer.[3] In his article, Freud argued for the widespread existence among neurotics of a fable in which the present-day parents were imposters, replacing a real and more aristocratic pair; but also that in repudiating the parents of today, the child is merely "turning away from the father whom he knows today to the father in whom he believed in the earliest years of his childhood".[4]

Later psychoanalysts have added that the child may turn to imaginary parents of a lower (= uninhibited) social standing;[5] and have seen the essence of the romance in the splitting and doubling of the parents[6] – a dichotomixation which hinders the effective working through of the parent complex.[7]

Literary examples

See also

References

  1. ^ M. Sweet, Inventing the Victorians (London 2001) p. 155
  2. ^ Editor's Note, S. Freud, On Sexuality (PFL 7) p. 219
  3. ^ P. Gay, Reading Freud (London 1990) p. 38-9
  4. ^ S. Freud, On Sexuality (PFL 7) p. 222-5
  5. ^ Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (London 1946) p. 96
  6. ^ M. Solomon, Beethoven Essays (London 1988) p. 88
  7. ^ J-M Quinodoz, Reading Freud (London 2006) p. 168
  8. ^ Hannah Green, I Never Promised You a Rose Garden (Pan 1967) p. 220
  9. ^ M. Backus, The Gothic Family Romance (1999) p. 18-19

External links

This page was last edited on 9 January 2023, at 09:25
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.