Dream and Littérature: Greek World.

Auteurs

  • Adélia Bezerra de Meneses Universidade de São Paulo.

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.1590/psicousp.v11i2.108116

Mots-clés :

Dreaming. Poetry. Greek literature.

Résumé

The idea is to discuss not only the meaning presented in dream productions in the Greek world, but also the congeniality between dream and literature. In fact, both in dream as well as in poetry, domain of Myths and not of Logos, unconscious energies act. In Greece, where dream has a well known oracular value, the magician’s and poet’s functions overlap, in relation to the capacity of seeing far beyond the sensitive appearances, of seeing what Walter Benjamin called “visible similarities.” There are questions that, from Homero and Aeschylus to Artemidor from Daldis to Aristotle cross the Greek way of thinking and living, that we are used to credit to Psychoanalysis: the relation between fantasy and dream, the sensitivity of imagination, the privilege of the significant, the effectiveness of the word (to which is attributed a therapeutic value), the importance of analogy (in dream's and poetry’s production and interpretation). Finally, something concerning the historicity of the symbol and the existence of “cultural archetypes.”

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Biographie de l'auteur

  • Adélia Bezerra de Meneses, Universidade de São Paulo.
    Professora de Teoria Literária - USP/UNICAMP

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Publiée

2000-01-01

Numéro

Rubrique

Artigos Originais

Comment citer

Dream and Littérature: Greek World. (2000). Psicologia USP, 11(2), 187-209. https://doi.org/10.1590/psicousp.v11i2.108116