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INTRODUCTION
King Lear is one of William Shakespeare’s masterpice which is for many critics regarded as the
greatest of his play and the most tragic play ever written. The story of King Lear and his three
daughters is actually an old tale that well-known in England before Shakespeare wrote it, but
Lear’s madness was not a part of the chronicle history. It’s just a plot added by Shakespeare
giving the effects of tragic to his play. It is written between Othello and Macbeth and first
performed for James I ( after Elizabeth I ). We know that Shakespeare wrote a lot of tragedies
that makes his works leave us in a deep impression and stir emotions of the audience.
In analyzing “King Lear” psychoanalyticly, we should focus on the inner sides of the characters.
What we will examine including characters, conflicts, symbols, theme, motifs, and dreams if
there any. We consider about Oedipus complex as well. Psychoanalytic theory believes that
someone’s desires that are unable being expressed or reached in reality, they will emerge in a
dream.
The conflicts in King Lear’s play are the battles of good and evil that will bring disaster for the
main characters. Using an Aristotelian definition of tragedy, the tragic hero is a protagonist
whose hamartia brougt him to his own downfall. King Lear is viewed as a tragic hero because
he’s a miserable old man, arrogance, vain, foolish, and incapable in controlling his emotion. His
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hamartia causes him not only lost his good daughter, Cordelia who has sincere love but he also
betrayed by his deceptive daughters, Regan and Goneril that lead to the decline of the kingdom.
It is typically Shakespeare to borrow tragic elements from several types of tragedies that were
popular during the Elizabethan Renaissance. Even though King Lear is classified as a chronical
play because of its elements of Senecan tragedy, it sometimes called Classical tragedy and the
morality play. The morality play provides the conflicts between Good versus Evil. Edmund,
Regan, Goneril, and Cornwall are on the Evil side that represent greed, envy, anger, and
lust.Whereas on the Good side, Cordelia, Edgar, Albany, Kent representative of faithfulness The
Senecan elements are for examples a loyal male servant ( Kent ), the themes of blood and lust
just like in Greek mythology, and Stichomythia.
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ANALYSIS
First of all, I will introduce each characters of the play. King Lear is the major character, the
protagonist, and dynamic character. He enjoys his absolute power, flatters, and pride that make
him unwise in actions. He wants to be treated as a king but he doesn’t want to fulfill his
obligation as a king. At the beginning, he blinds to the truth and gets angry at Cordelia , but
finally he realizes his faults. He inspired by the loyalty of people who risk their life for him. Lear
develops as a character and learns from mistakes and becomes a more insightful human being.
Cordelia is Lear’s youngest daughter. She’s a beautiful, mild and sincere lady with
unconditional love. She keeps loyal to King Lear even though he banished her. She forgives her
evil sisters for what they’ve done.
Goneril is Lear’s oldest daughter and the Duke of Albany’s wife. She and her sister Regan are
all the same of envious, treacherous, aggressive and amoral character that is not expected in a
female character. She wants to take over his father authority, and has an affair with Edmund.
Regan is Lear’s middle daughter and the Duke of Cornwall’s wife. She competes with her sister
Goneril for a same man, Edmund that brings destruction for the three of them.
Gloucester is a nobleman who is loyal to King Lear, the father of Edgar and Edmund. He’s fate
actually similar with Lear. He makes mistake in trusting wrong child. At the beginning, he
seems like a weak man but in the end, he shows his great bravery.
Edgar is Gloucester’s older and legitimate son. He plays several roles in this play. At the
beginning, he seems like a fool easily tricked by his brother. Then he disguise as a crazy beggar
to evade his father’s men. And finally he appears in full armor to protect Lear and Gloucester.
Edmund is Gloucester’s younger-illegitimate son. He shames of and hates his status as bastard
and plans to take over Gloucester’s possessions he gave to Edgar. He’s a scary man and almost
succeeding in all his schemes that bring destruction to other characters.
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Kent is a nobleman of the same rank as Gloucester who is extremely loyal to King Lear. He
disguises as a peasant and continue to serve Lear even after Lear banished him.
Albany is Goneril’s husband. He’s good at heart and opposes the cruelty of Goneril, Regan, and
Cornwall. Yet his realization is quite late in the play.
Cornwall is Regan’s husband. Unlike Albany, he’s cruel and violent. He conspires with his wife
and his sister in law to persecute Lear and Gloucester.
Fool is Lear’s jester, who uses double talk and seems frivolous but sometimes he gives Lear
important advice.
Oswald is the chief servant in Goneril’s house. He obeys his lady’s commands and helps her in
her conspiracies.
The setting takes place in Ancient Britain in the castle of King lear and the Earl of Gloucester,
the Duke of Albany palace, a forest, a heath, a farm house near Gloucester’s castle, a French
camp near Dover, and fields near Dover.
The plot is opened in King Lear’s castle as two noblemen, Kent and Gloucester talk about King
Lear who will divide his kingdom. King Lear is the ruler of Britain announces his plan to divide
the kingdom among his three daughters. It depends on who loves him the most to be given the
greatest share. Goneril and Regan, the older daughters flatter him by telling that they love him
more than anything else. But, Cordelia the youngest and favorite daughter refuses to flatter and
says that she loves him as much as a daughter should love her father. If her sisters love their
father as much as they say, they wouldn’t have love for husbands. Kent disagrees with the king
telling that it is insane to reward the flattery of his older daughters and disown Cordelia. Lear
gets angry at Kent and tells he must be gone from the kingdom within six days. The king of
France and duke of Burgundy wait for his decision which of them who will marry Cordelia. Lear
tells that Cordelia doesn’t have any title or land anymore. Burgundy withdraws his proposal, but
France is impressed by Cordelia’s honesty and decides to make her his queen. Lear sends her
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away to France without his blessing .Although now Goneril and Regan have power over the
kingdom, they still want their father’s remaining authority.
Meanwhile a nobleman named Gloucester also experience family problems just like Lear.
Edmund resents his status as bastard or illegitimate son. He is also being jealous with Edgar, the
legitimate son who is inherited their father’s wealth. Edmund tried to discredit Edgar by create a
plot in which Edgar tried to kill his father. Edgar flees to the heath when they pursue him and
disguises as a crazy beggar and calls himself “Tom O-bedlam”.Lear’s realizes that he made a bad
decision. Lear couldn’t believe that his beloved daughters have betrayed him. It makes him gone
insane. He flees from his daughters’ houses wandering on a heath during a great thunderstorm,
accompanies by his Fool and Kent.When Gloucester realizes that Lear’s daughters have turned
against their father, he decides to help Lear. Regan and her husband, Cornwall discover him who
plans to help Lear. They accuse him of betrayal and make him blind. His son Edgar who is in
disguise accompanies his father until they reach the city of Dover where Lear has also been
brought.
In Dover, Cordelia tries to save her father. Meanwhile, Edmund have affairs with both Regan
and Goneril. Goneril and Edmund conspire to kill Albany who is sympathetic to Lear. Gloucester
in desperation and tries to commit suicide, but Edgar comes to save him. Meanwhile, the English
troops lead by Edmund reach Dover defeat the French troops lead by Cordelia. Lear and Cordelia
are captured. In the climax, before duels with Edmund Edgar reveals his identity to his father.
Gloucester is in between joy and grief and then he died. Goneril poisons Regan because of
jealousy over Edmund before kill herself when Albany reveals her treachery. Edmund’s betrayal
of Cordelia leads her execution, she’s being hanged. Lear is out of sanity to see her died. Kent
speaks to him but he doesn’t recognize him because of insanity. Lear thinks that he sees her
beginning to breathe again, then he dies. Albany gives Edgar and Kent their power and titles
back ask them to rule with him. Kent feels himself near death, refuses but Edgar accepts. As a
funeral march plays, the few survivors exit sadly.
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There are some motifs that trigger King Lear’s tragedy. First is Madness. From madness Lear
learns humility that makes him more human and wise. The second is Betrayal. There are so
many betrayals and there’s lesson within it such as the betrayals of daughters to father, son to
father, brother to brother, and sister to sister. The lesson we get, betrayal leads the doers into
their own destruction.
For one reason symbols are made by Shakespeare to represent his abstract ideas or concepts.
First symbol is The Storm. The Storm is symbolic of great rages. It is reflection of internal
confusion. At the same time, it gives the power of nature for human to realize human mortality
and frailty and civilize human for a sense of humility. At a time, the Storm echoes Lear’s inner
turmoil and insanity. The second symbol is Blindness. Blindness symbolizes blind to the truth.
Blind to see what’s right and wrong. The lesson we get from blindness is, when you can’t see the
truth, no matter what, time will find the truth. Perhaps through another sense such as the feeling
that is as much valuable as the sight which guides human back to humanity.
The themes of the play are false-seeming, mercy, and justice. False-seeming can make
someone lost in ways. But it will make a person learns, transforms into a good person and create
a new self-awareness. King Lear’s wisdom grows because he comes to realize his errors. It
brings suffer to him and he learns much from it.
The conflicts in Shakespeare’s King Lear are rich of psychological issues. Since the beginning of
the play, the madness is started. Lear divides his kingdom to his two eldest evil daughters,
Goneril and Regan and banishes his good daughter Cordelia that he loves most. Consequently, an
arrogance king with absolute power has to experience suffer and his pride falls to a very low
place. The chaos is triggered by his corrupt personal relationship and the need of love. The
absence of a wife is one of the motives. He foolishly asks his daughters the amount of love they
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have for him and swaps his kingdom for that. Cordelia who refuses to put a price on her love has
to receive the punishment.
In Act 1 it reveals Lear desire of mental disorder what is called Oedipus complex by Freud. He
tried to keep his daughter away from marriage. This Oedipus complex damages not only his
daughter life but also his own life. Cordelia loves Lear like a daughter that half of her love must
go for a husband. Her words become hurtful to Lear when she says that:
You have begot me, bred me, lov’d me: I
Return those duties back as are right fit,
Obey you, love you, and most honor you.
Why have my sisters husbands, if they say
They love you all? Haply, when I shall wed,
That lord whose hand must take my plight shall carry
Half my love with him, half my care and duty:
Sure I shall never marry like my sisters,
To love my father all.
Lear is clouded by rage since then. He sabotages Cordelia’s chance of marriage by giving her
nothing causes Duke of Burgundy cancels his proposal. Yet, the King of France accepts Cordelia
because he impressed by her honesty. Lear’s madness gets worse and worse in Act 5 scene 3:
Come, let’s away to prison;
We two alone will sing like birds I’ the cage:
…So we’ll live,
and pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh
At gilded butterflies, and hear poor rogues
8
King Lear’s words reveals his happiness to be with his daughter and shows his strong love, if he
can be with her it doesn’t matter live even in prison. These emotions supposed to more
appropriate to a lover than to a father. Perhaps, Lear’s Oedipal inclination of a father’s sexual
interest in his daughter triggered by the absent of wife. The abundance of Lear’s desires and
emotions he tries to hold causes his madness. King Lear is a tragic figure who fails to understand
himself that through Freudian theory psychologically it can be understood. Freud’s psychological
components of the Id, the Ego, and, the Superego can be used to analyze King Lear’s psychology
that leads to his downfall and madness.
In Freud’s Psychoanalysis there is tripartite idea which is divided into the Id, the Ego, and the
Superego. Sometimes in conflict, these three forces interact with one another. These three parts
of the Unconscious triggers the hungry feeling, thoughts, images, and desires of human nature.
Freud theorizes that unconscious thoughts are consciously revealed, in unexpected way. Through
King Lear, Shakespeare successfully reveals Lear’s unconscious thought. The oldest and the
most primitive part is the Id. We are all born with the Id which is by Freud called the pleasure
principle. It is selfish desires that need to be satisfied and triggers to seek the pleasure and take
no account of logic or reason, reality or morality. The hard repression of the Id causes neurotic
symptoms and Freudian slips that could lead to the insanity. King Lear’s selfish behavior
demonstrates the Id. In this situation it is provoked by the situation especially by his evil
daughters in Act I scene III: “Put on what weary negligence you please…If he distate it, let him
to our sister…And let his knights have colder looks among you;”
When Goneril instructs Oswald to treat Lear and his men poorly, Lear satisfies his Id’s desire for
drinking, lust, and disorderly conduct. He pays back with disrespectful behavior and in verbal
aggression. He curses Goneril:
Dry up in her the organs of increase,
And from her derogate body never spring
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A babe to honor her! If she must teem,
Create her child of spleen, that it may live
And be a thwart disnatured torment to her!
Lear’s irrational behavior and aggressiveness emerges because of the Id stimulus. Usually, The
Ego will hold aggressive behavior and redirect towards something more acceptable or
appropriate. Since Lear’s ego fails to redirect his inappropriate and aggressive behavior,
consequently he has to experience the unpleasant effects of his actions. Later we see, Lear learns
from his previous experience with Goneril and his Id becomes a little bit in control, it showed
when he talks to Regan: “Tis not in thee to grudge my pleasures, to cut off my train…”
The second part of Freud’s tripartite is the Ego, the rational part of the mind. The Ego describes
the conscious and logical part of the psyche which is in accordance with the reality to control the
Id and keep it in the right track, in a safe and nondestructive way and mediates between the Id
and the Superego. When King Lear’s asks, “which of you shall we say doth love us most” and he
gets unexpected answer from Cordelia, his Ego seems struggle hard to control the Id, Cordelia
has to pay her honesty. As Kent advises Lear to reconsider his hasty decision, Kent has to
receive punishment as well because of uncontrollable Lear’s Id:
When Lear is mad. What would’st thou do, old man?
Think’st thou that duty shall have dread to speak
When power to flattery bows? To plainness honour’s bound
When majesty falls to folly. Reserve thy state;
And in thy best consideration, check
This hideous rashness: answer my life my judgement,
10
As the Id overwhelms and the Ego becomes weak, it triggers his madness. But at a time, Lear
comes to realize his errors little by little, and his Ego can control the Id. In the beginning of Act
III, Lear’s ego tries to hold his Id by crying against it: “You heavens, give me that patience,
patience I need! You see me here, you gods, a poor old man, as full of grief as age; wretched in
both!”
At the end of Act III, once again Lear becomes completely mad and the Ego tends to distort.
There are violent battles inside him because of repression, denial, rationalization, regression, and
isolation. At the end of the play, Lear denies Cordelia’s death. He has to face what he can’t face.
Lear fantasizes that he sees her beginning to breathe again. He dies because of a lot of shocks in
his mind.
The third part of Freud’s model is the Superego that Freud called ‘primary narcissism’ or self-
centredness. The Super-ego represents the society and demands perfection of the ego and the
ideals of thought and behavior. It is the human conscience that causes us to make moral
judgments of what is right and what is wrong. We try to behave in ways that acceptable to
society than our own individual will. It appears such feelings of shame, guilt, and pride. The
moral standards of Elizabethan society are certainly different from our own where the divine
right of kings, as a ruler is moral obligation. There is a clash between Lear’s moral duties as a
father and as a king. He thinks that he can separate these roles, but he cannot. Lear’s decisions
concerning love, family, and justice are the right things according to him but it is foolish in our
perspective. Lear’s ego tried to balance out the Id’s desire gratification and the Superego’s moral
gratification. If the ego is forced to work harder more than it could bear, it will cause disorder of
the neurotic system. From Psychoanalytic criticism, now we understand what makes King Lear’s
madness.
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CONCLUSION
The very important part of the organism is the nervous system which is also the most sensitive
part of the body. It translates the organism’s needs and give motivations. We usually called them
instincts or drives, or Freud’s ‘wishes’. According to Freud, all human behaviors are motivated
by the instincts or the drives that need to be satisfied and to be at peace. That’s why life can be
painful and exhausting process just to satisfy our human’s need. For the majority of people in the
world, there are more pains than pleasures in life that are just death could release human struggle
from them.
Psychoanalysis is the perfect type of literary criticism to analyze Shakespeare’s tragedy of King
Lear. We learn much from this that how hard our neurotic system works every day to balance our
life. What King Lear had been experienced explaining it’s not that easy to control our desires,
wishes, and behavior and fit them with the society. Repression and isolation are just like a time
bomb that will explode anytime that will ruin our body. And too much Provocation, denial, also
rationalization will make it even worse. In conclusion, human madness is provoked both by their
inner self and the society. So that, we are as a part of society should have concern and not
provoke one to another because a mental disorder is serious social problem that will bring
tragedy we never know it’s something we’ve done that we don’t even aware.
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GLOSSARY
Chronical play a drama of historical material that based on history.
Classical tragedy a story full of incidents that bring pity, fear and arouse emotions, which is the hero
ends in misfortune or tragic that is typically story in classical times.
Ego the rational part of the mind. The Ego describes the conscious and logical part of the psyche which
is in accordance with the reality to control the Id and keep it in the right track, in a safe and
nondestructive way and mediates between the Id and the Superego.
Hamartia errors or missteps of a tragic hero that leads to his downfall.
Id selfish desires that need to be satisfied and triggers us to seek the pleasure and take no account of
logic or reason, reality or morality
Morality play characters personified virtues ( good ) and vice (evil ).
Senecan tragedy early Renaissance tragedy borrowed the "violent and bloody plots, resounding
rhetorical speeches and sometimes the five-act structure e.g. Hamlet, Othello, King Lear and Macbeth.
Stichomythia dramatic dialogue as in Ancient Greek play, characterized by brief exchanges between
two characters, usually one line verse with intense emotion or strong argumentation.
Super-ego self-centredness that represents the society and demands perfection of the ego and the ideals
of thought and behavior. It is the human conscience that causes us to make moral judgments of what is
right and what is wrong.
Tragic hero a person of noble birth or a great character in dramatic tragedy ended suffering and loss of
throne or position or power.
13
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Craig, W. J, ed. (1905) The Works of Shakespeare: The Tragedy of King Lear. Indianapolis:
Bowen-Merrill Company.
Matthews, Honor. (2009) Character and Symbol in Shakespeare’s Play. New York: Cambridge
University Press.
Rennison, Nick. (2001) Freud & Psychoanalysis. Harpenden: Pocket Essentials.

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"King Lear" Psychoanalytic criticism

  • 1. 1 INTRODUCTION King Lear is one of William Shakespeare’s masterpice which is for many critics regarded as the greatest of his play and the most tragic play ever written. The story of King Lear and his three daughters is actually an old tale that well-known in England before Shakespeare wrote it, but Lear’s madness was not a part of the chronicle history. It’s just a plot added by Shakespeare giving the effects of tragic to his play. It is written between Othello and Macbeth and first performed for James I ( after Elizabeth I ). We know that Shakespeare wrote a lot of tragedies that makes his works leave us in a deep impression and stir emotions of the audience. In analyzing “King Lear” psychoanalyticly, we should focus on the inner sides of the characters. What we will examine including characters, conflicts, symbols, theme, motifs, and dreams if there any. We consider about Oedipus complex as well. Psychoanalytic theory believes that someone’s desires that are unable being expressed or reached in reality, they will emerge in a dream. The conflicts in King Lear’s play are the battles of good and evil that will bring disaster for the main characters. Using an Aristotelian definition of tragedy, the tragic hero is a protagonist whose hamartia brougt him to his own downfall. King Lear is viewed as a tragic hero because he’s a miserable old man, arrogance, vain, foolish, and incapable in controlling his emotion. His
  • 2. 2 hamartia causes him not only lost his good daughter, Cordelia who has sincere love but he also betrayed by his deceptive daughters, Regan and Goneril that lead to the decline of the kingdom. It is typically Shakespeare to borrow tragic elements from several types of tragedies that were popular during the Elizabethan Renaissance. Even though King Lear is classified as a chronical play because of its elements of Senecan tragedy, it sometimes called Classical tragedy and the morality play. The morality play provides the conflicts between Good versus Evil. Edmund, Regan, Goneril, and Cornwall are on the Evil side that represent greed, envy, anger, and lust.Whereas on the Good side, Cordelia, Edgar, Albany, Kent representative of faithfulness The Senecan elements are for examples a loyal male servant ( Kent ), the themes of blood and lust just like in Greek mythology, and Stichomythia.
  • 3. 3 ANALYSIS First of all, I will introduce each characters of the play. King Lear is the major character, the protagonist, and dynamic character. He enjoys his absolute power, flatters, and pride that make him unwise in actions. He wants to be treated as a king but he doesn’t want to fulfill his obligation as a king. At the beginning, he blinds to the truth and gets angry at Cordelia , but finally he realizes his faults. He inspired by the loyalty of people who risk their life for him. Lear develops as a character and learns from mistakes and becomes a more insightful human being. Cordelia is Lear’s youngest daughter. She’s a beautiful, mild and sincere lady with unconditional love. She keeps loyal to King Lear even though he banished her. She forgives her evil sisters for what they’ve done. Goneril is Lear’s oldest daughter and the Duke of Albany’s wife. She and her sister Regan are all the same of envious, treacherous, aggressive and amoral character that is not expected in a female character. She wants to take over his father authority, and has an affair with Edmund. Regan is Lear’s middle daughter and the Duke of Cornwall’s wife. She competes with her sister Goneril for a same man, Edmund that brings destruction for the three of them. Gloucester is a nobleman who is loyal to King Lear, the father of Edgar and Edmund. He’s fate actually similar with Lear. He makes mistake in trusting wrong child. At the beginning, he seems like a weak man but in the end, he shows his great bravery. Edgar is Gloucester’s older and legitimate son. He plays several roles in this play. At the beginning, he seems like a fool easily tricked by his brother. Then he disguise as a crazy beggar to evade his father’s men. And finally he appears in full armor to protect Lear and Gloucester. Edmund is Gloucester’s younger-illegitimate son. He shames of and hates his status as bastard and plans to take over Gloucester’s possessions he gave to Edgar. He’s a scary man and almost succeeding in all his schemes that bring destruction to other characters.
  • 4. 4 Kent is a nobleman of the same rank as Gloucester who is extremely loyal to King Lear. He disguises as a peasant and continue to serve Lear even after Lear banished him. Albany is Goneril’s husband. He’s good at heart and opposes the cruelty of Goneril, Regan, and Cornwall. Yet his realization is quite late in the play. Cornwall is Regan’s husband. Unlike Albany, he’s cruel and violent. He conspires with his wife and his sister in law to persecute Lear and Gloucester. Fool is Lear’s jester, who uses double talk and seems frivolous but sometimes he gives Lear important advice. Oswald is the chief servant in Goneril’s house. He obeys his lady’s commands and helps her in her conspiracies. The setting takes place in Ancient Britain in the castle of King lear and the Earl of Gloucester, the Duke of Albany palace, a forest, a heath, a farm house near Gloucester’s castle, a French camp near Dover, and fields near Dover. The plot is opened in King Lear’s castle as two noblemen, Kent and Gloucester talk about King Lear who will divide his kingdom. King Lear is the ruler of Britain announces his plan to divide the kingdom among his three daughters. It depends on who loves him the most to be given the greatest share. Goneril and Regan, the older daughters flatter him by telling that they love him more than anything else. But, Cordelia the youngest and favorite daughter refuses to flatter and says that she loves him as much as a daughter should love her father. If her sisters love their father as much as they say, they wouldn’t have love for husbands. Kent disagrees with the king telling that it is insane to reward the flattery of his older daughters and disown Cordelia. Lear gets angry at Kent and tells he must be gone from the kingdom within six days. The king of France and duke of Burgundy wait for his decision which of them who will marry Cordelia. Lear tells that Cordelia doesn’t have any title or land anymore. Burgundy withdraws his proposal, but France is impressed by Cordelia’s honesty and decides to make her his queen. Lear sends her
  • 5. 5 away to France without his blessing .Although now Goneril and Regan have power over the kingdom, they still want their father’s remaining authority. Meanwhile a nobleman named Gloucester also experience family problems just like Lear. Edmund resents his status as bastard or illegitimate son. He is also being jealous with Edgar, the legitimate son who is inherited their father’s wealth. Edmund tried to discredit Edgar by create a plot in which Edgar tried to kill his father. Edgar flees to the heath when they pursue him and disguises as a crazy beggar and calls himself “Tom O-bedlam”.Lear’s realizes that he made a bad decision. Lear couldn’t believe that his beloved daughters have betrayed him. It makes him gone insane. He flees from his daughters’ houses wandering on a heath during a great thunderstorm, accompanies by his Fool and Kent.When Gloucester realizes that Lear’s daughters have turned against their father, he decides to help Lear. Regan and her husband, Cornwall discover him who plans to help Lear. They accuse him of betrayal and make him blind. His son Edgar who is in disguise accompanies his father until they reach the city of Dover where Lear has also been brought. In Dover, Cordelia tries to save her father. Meanwhile, Edmund have affairs with both Regan and Goneril. Goneril and Edmund conspire to kill Albany who is sympathetic to Lear. Gloucester in desperation and tries to commit suicide, but Edgar comes to save him. Meanwhile, the English troops lead by Edmund reach Dover defeat the French troops lead by Cordelia. Lear and Cordelia are captured. In the climax, before duels with Edmund Edgar reveals his identity to his father. Gloucester is in between joy and grief and then he died. Goneril poisons Regan because of jealousy over Edmund before kill herself when Albany reveals her treachery. Edmund’s betrayal of Cordelia leads her execution, she’s being hanged. Lear is out of sanity to see her died. Kent speaks to him but he doesn’t recognize him because of insanity. Lear thinks that he sees her beginning to breathe again, then he dies. Albany gives Edgar and Kent their power and titles back ask them to rule with him. Kent feels himself near death, refuses but Edgar accepts. As a funeral march plays, the few survivors exit sadly.
  • 6. 6 There are some motifs that trigger King Lear’s tragedy. First is Madness. From madness Lear learns humility that makes him more human and wise. The second is Betrayal. There are so many betrayals and there’s lesson within it such as the betrayals of daughters to father, son to father, brother to brother, and sister to sister. The lesson we get, betrayal leads the doers into their own destruction. For one reason symbols are made by Shakespeare to represent his abstract ideas or concepts. First symbol is The Storm. The Storm is symbolic of great rages. It is reflection of internal confusion. At the same time, it gives the power of nature for human to realize human mortality and frailty and civilize human for a sense of humility. At a time, the Storm echoes Lear’s inner turmoil and insanity. The second symbol is Blindness. Blindness symbolizes blind to the truth. Blind to see what’s right and wrong. The lesson we get from blindness is, when you can’t see the truth, no matter what, time will find the truth. Perhaps through another sense such as the feeling that is as much valuable as the sight which guides human back to humanity. The themes of the play are false-seeming, mercy, and justice. False-seeming can make someone lost in ways. But it will make a person learns, transforms into a good person and create a new self-awareness. King Lear’s wisdom grows because he comes to realize his errors. It brings suffer to him and he learns much from it. The conflicts in Shakespeare’s King Lear are rich of psychological issues. Since the beginning of the play, the madness is started. Lear divides his kingdom to his two eldest evil daughters, Goneril and Regan and banishes his good daughter Cordelia that he loves most. Consequently, an arrogance king with absolute power has to experience suffer and his pride falls to a very low place. The chaos is triggered by his corrupt personal relationship and the need of love. The absence of a wife is one of the motives. He foolishly asks his daughters the amount of love they
  • 7. 7 have for him and swaps his kingdom for that. Cordelia who refuses to put a price on her love has to receive the punishment. In Act 1 it reveals Lear desire of mental disorder what is called Oedipus complex by Freud. He tried to keep his daughter away from marriage. This Oedipus complex damages not only his daughter life but also his own life. Cordelia loves Lear like a daughter that half of her love must go for a husband. Her words become hurtful to Lear when she says that: You have begot me, bred me, lov’d me: I Return those duties back as are right fit, Obey you, love you, and most honor you. Why have my sisters husbands, if they say They love you all? Haply, when I shall wed, That lord whose hand must take my plight shall carry Half my love with him, half my care and duty: Sure I shall never marry like my sisters, To love my father all. Lear is clouded by rage since then. He sabotages Cordelia’s chance of marriage by giving her nothing causes Duke of Burgundy cancels his proposal. Yet, the King of France accepts Cordelia because he impressed by her honesty. Lear’s madness gets worse and worse in Act 5 scene 3: Come, let’s away to prison; We two alone will sing like birds I’ the cage: …So we’ll live, and pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh At gilded butterflies, and hear poor rogues
  • 8. 8 King Lear’s words reveals his happiness to be with his daughter and shows his strong love, if he can be with her it doesn’t matter live even in prison. These emotions supposed to more appropriate to a lover than to a father. Perhaps, Lear’s Oedipal inclination of a father’s sexual interest in his daughter triggered by the absent of wife. The abundance of Lear’s desires and emotions he tries to hold causes his madness. King Lear is a tragic figure who fails to understand himself that through Freudian theory psychologically it can be understood. Freud’s psychological components of the Id, the Ego, and, the Superego can be used to analyze King Lear’s psychology that leads to his downfall and madness. In Freud’s Psychoanalysis there is tripartite idea which is divided into the Id, the Ego, and the Superego. Sometimes in conflict, these three forces interact with one another. These three parts of the Unconscious triggers the hungry feeling, thoughts, images, and desires of human nature. Freud theorizes that unconscious thoughts are consciously revealed, in unexpected way. Through King Lear, Shakespeare successfully reveals Lear’s unconscious thought. The oldest and the most primitive part is the Id. We are all born with the Id which is by Freud called the pleasure principle. It is selfish desires that need to be satisfied and triggers to seek the pleasure and take no account of logic or reason, reality or morality. The hard repression of the Id causes neurotic symptoms and Freudian slips that could lead to the insanity. King Lear’s selfish behavior demonstrates the Id. In this situation it is provoked by the situation especially by his evil daughters in Act I scene III: “Put on what weary negligence you please…If he distate it, let him to our sister…And let his knights have colder looks among you;” When Goneril instructs Oswald to treat Lear and his men poorly, Lear satisfies his Id’s desire for drinking, lust, and disorderly conduct. He pays back with disrespectful behavior and in verbal aggression. He curses Goneril: Dry up in her the organs of increase, And from her derogate body never spring
  • 9. 9 A babe to honor her! If she must teem, Create her child of spleen, that it may live And be a thwart disnatured torment to her! Lear’s irrational behavior and aggressiveness emerges because of the Id stimulus. Usually, The Ego will hold aggressive behavior and redirect towards something more acceptable or appropriate. Since Lear’s ego fails to redirect his inappropriate and aggressive behavior, consequently he has to experience the unpleasant effects of his actions. Later we see, Lear learns from his previous experience with Goneril and his Id becomes a little bit in control, it showed when he talks to Regan: “Tis not in thee to grudge my pleasures, to cut off my train…” The second part of Freud’s tripartite is the Ego, the rational part of the mind. The Ego describes the conscious and logical part of the psyche which is in accordance with the reality to control the Id and keep it in the right track, in a safe and nondestructive way and mediates between the Id and the Superego. When King Lear’s asks, “which of you shall we say doth love us most” and he gets unexpected answer from Cordelia, his Ego seems struggle hard to control the Id, Cordelia has to pay her honesty. As Kent advises Lear to reconsider his hasty decision, Kent has to receive punishment as well because of uncontrollable Lear’s Id: When Lear is mad. What would’st thou do, old man? Think’st thou that duty shall have dread to speak When power to flattery bows? To plainness honour’s bound When majesty falls to folly. Reserve thy state; And in thy best consideration, check This hideous rashness: answer my life my judgement,
  • 10. 10 As the Id overwhelms and the Ego becomes weak, it triggers his madness. But at a time, Lear comes to realize his errors little by little, and his Ego can control the Id. In the beginning of Act III, Lear’s ego tries to hold his Id by crying against it: “You heavens, give me that patience, patience I need! You see me here, you gods, a poor old man, as full of grief as age; wretched in both!” At the end of Act III, once again Lear becomes completely mad and the Ego tends to distort. There are violent battles inside him because of repression, denial, rationalization, regression, and isolation. At the end of the play, Lear denies Cordelia’s death. He has to face what he can’t face. Lear fantasizes that he sees her beginning to breathe again. He dies because of a lot of shocks in his mind. The third part of Freud’s model is the Superego that Freud called ‘primary narcissism’ or self- centredness. The Super-ego represents the society and demands perfection of the ego and the ideals of thought and behavior. It is the human conscience that causes us to make moral judgments of what is right and what is wrong. We try to behave in ways that acceptable to society than our own individual will. It appears such feelings of shame, guilt, and pride. The moral standards of Elizabethan society are certainly different from our own where the divine right of kings, as a ruler is moral obligation. There is a clash between Lear’s moral duties as a father and as a king. He thinks that he can separate these roles, but he cannot. Lear’s decisions concerning love, family, and justice are the right things according to him but it is foolish in our perspective. Lear’s ego tried to balance out the Id’s desire gratification and the Superego’s moral gratification. If the ego is forced to work harder more than it could bear, it will cause disorder of the neurotic system. From Psychoanalytic criticism, now we understand what makes King Lear’s madness.
  • 11. 11 CONCLUSION The very important part of the organism is the nervous system which is also the most sensitive part of the body. It translates the organism’s needs and give motivations. We usually called them instincts or drives, or Freud’s ‘wishes’. According to Freud, all human behaviors are motivated by the instincts or the drives that need to be satisfied and to be at peace. That’s why life can be painful and exhausting process just to satisfy our human’s need. For the majority of people in the world, there are more pains than pleasures in life that are just death could release human struggle from them. Psychoanalysis is the perfect type of literary criticism to analyze Shakespeare’s tragedy of King Lear. We learn much from this that how hard our neurotic system works every day to balance our life. What King Lear had been experienced explaining it’s not that easy to control our desires, wishes, and behavior and fit them with the society. Repression and isolation are just like a time bomb that will explode anytime that will ruin our body. And too much Provocation, denial, also rationalization will make it even worse. In conclusion, human madness is provoked both by their inner self and the society. So that, we are as a part of society should have concern and not provoke one to another because a mental disorder is serious social problem that will bring tragedy we never know it’s something we’ve done that we don’t even aware.
  • 12. 12 GLOSSARY Chronical play a drama of historical material that based on history. Classical tragedy a story full of incidents that bring pity, fear and arouse emotions, which is the hero ends in misfortune or tragic that is typically story in classical times. Ego the rational part of the mind. The Ego describes the conscious and logical part of the psyche which is in accordance with the reality to control the Id and keep it in the right track, in a safe and nondestructive way and mediates between the Id and the Superego. Hamartia errors or missteps of a tragic hero that leads to his downfall. Id selfish desires that need to be satisfied and triggers us to seek the pleasure and take no account of logic or reason, reality or morality Morality play characters personified virtues ( good ) and vice (evil ). Senecan tragedy early Renaissance tragedy borrowed the "violent and bloody plots, resounding rhetorical speeches and sometimes the five-act structure e.g. Hamlet, Othello, King Lear and Macbeth. Stichomythia dramatic dialogue as in Ancient Greek play, characterized by brief exchanges between two characters, usually one line verse with intense emotion or strong argumentation. Super-ego self-centredness that represents the society and demands perfection of the ego and the ideals of thought and behavior. It is the human conscience that causes us to make moral judgments of what is right and what is wrong. Tragic hero a person of noble birth or a great character in dramatic tragedy ended suffering and loss of throne or position or power.
  • 13. 13 BIBLIOGRAPHY Craig, W. J, ed. (1905) The Works of Shakespeare: The Tragedy of King Lear. Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill Company. Matthews, Honor. (2009) Character and Symbol in Shakespeare’s Play. New York: Cambridge University Press. Rennison, Nick. (2001) Freud & Psychoanalysis. Harpenden: Pocket Essentials.