2. AGENDA
• Some Questions about Psychoanalytic Criticism
• Group Activity: Part 10
• Bishop’s “The Fish” and Elizabeth Bishop’s “The Fish”:
A Psychoanalytic Reading.
• Identify and discuss qualities of psychoanalytic criticism
as it is applied in this essay. Provide specific examples
from the essay, the poem, or the definition/description
of Psychoanalytic Criticism.
3. SOME QUESTIONS PSYCHOANALYTIC
CRITICS ASK ABOUT LITERARY TEXTS
1. How do the operations of repression structure or inform the
work? That is, what unconscious motives are operating in the
main character(s); what core issues are thereby illustrated; and
how do these core issues structure or inform the piece?
(Remember, the unconscious consists of repressed wounds,
fears, unresolved conflicts, and guilty desires.)
4. 2. Are there any oedipal dynamics—or any other family
dynamics—at work here? That is, is it possible to relate a
character’s patterns of adult behavior to early experiences in
the family as represented in the story? How do these patterns
of behavior and family dynamics operate and what do they
reveal?
3. How can characters’ behavior, narrative events, and/or
images be explained in terms of psychoanalytic concepts of
any kind (for example, regression, crisis, projection, fear of or
fascination with death, sexuality—which includes love and
romance as well as sexual behavior—as a primary indicator of
psychological identity, or the operations of ego-id-superego)?
5. 4. In what ways can we view a literary work as analogous to a dream? That is,
how might recurrent or striking dream symbols reveal the ways in which the
narrator or speaker is projecting his or her unconscious desires, fears, wounds, or
unresolved conflicts onto other characters, onto the setting, or onto the events
portrayed? Symbols relevant to death, sexuality, and the unconscious are
especially helpful. Indeed, the use of dream symbols canbe very useful in
interpreting literary works, or passages thereof, that seem unrealistic or fantastic,
in other words, that seem dreamlike.
5. What does the work suggest about the psychological being of its author?
Although this question is no longer the primary question asked by
psychoanalytic critics, some critics still address it, especially those who write
psychological biographies (psychobiographies). In these cases, the literary
text is interpreted much as if it were the author’s dream. Psychoanalyzing
an author in this manner is a difficult undertaking, and our analysis must
be carefully derived by examining the author’s entire corpus as well as
letters, diaries, and any other biographical material available. Certainly, a
single literary work can provide but a very incomplete picture.
6. 6. What might a given interpretation of a literary work suggest
about the psychological motives of the reader? Or what might a
critical trend suggest about the psychological motives of a group
of readers (for example, the tendency of literary critics to see
Willy Loman as a devoted family man and ignore or underplay his
contribution to the family dysfunction)?
7. In what ways does the text seem to reveal characters’ emotional
investments in the Symbolic Order, the Imaginary Order, the
Mirror Stage, or what Lacan calls objet petit a? Does any part of
the text seem to represent Lacan’s notion of the Real? Do any
Lacanian concepts account for so much of the text that we might
say the text is structured by one or more of these concepts?
7. ELIZABETH BISHOP’S “THE FISH”
• I caught a tremendous fish
and held him beside the boat
half out of water, with my hook
fast in a corner of his mouth.
He didn't fight.
He hadn't fought at all.
He hung a grunting weight,
battered and venerable
and homely. Here and there
his brown skin hung in strips
like ancient wallpaper,
and its pattern of darker brown
was like wallpaper:
shapes like full-blown roses
stained and lost through age.
8. BISHOP’S “THE FISH” AND ELIZABETH BISHOP’S “THE
FISH”: A PSYCHOANALYTIC READING.
• Identify and discuss qualities of
psychoanalytic criticism as it is
applied in this essay about “The
Fish.”
• Provide specific examples from the
essay, the poem, or the
definition/description of
Psychoanalytic Criticism that
further support a psychoanalytic
reading of the poem.
9. WHAT DO YOU SAY?
• Identify and discuss qualities of
psychoanalytic criticism as it is applied
in this essay. Provide specific
examples from the essay, the poem, or
the definition/description of
Psychoanalytic Criticism.
11. EXAM REVIEW: PRESENTATIONS 4-20
1. Passage Identification: Work and Author
2. Character Identification
3. Terms: Fill in the blank
4. Theory Identification
5. Essay Question
12. EXAM REVIEW
1. Passage identification by work and author:
The hand that held my wrist
Was battered on one knuckle;
2. Character identification
I was so out of things, I'd never heard of the Jehovah's
Witnesses. "Are you a C.O.?" I asked a fellow jailbird.
"No," he answered, "I'm a J.W.”
3. Terms: Fill in the blank
________________occurs when a word, image, or event
generates two or more different meanings”
13. EXAM REVIEW
4. Identify the Theory
• This theory maintains that a literary work contains
certain intrinsic features, and the theory “defines
and addresses the specifically literary qualities in the
text."
5. Short essay/Long answer
• Explain New Criticism. You might consider the
following: What made New Criticism new? What
is the critical focus of New Criticism? What kinds
of questions do New Critics ask? How does it
intersect with other critical theories?