
The Interpretation of Dreams
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Narrated by:
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Simon Vance
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By:
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Sigmund Freud
About this listen
In this groundbreaking work, Freud further demonstrated that it is in the treatment of abnormal mental states that dream analysis is the most valuable. He claimed that dreams not only reveal to us the cryptic mechanisms of phobias, obsessions, and delusions but also are the most potent weapon in the healing of them.
This book is indispensable to anyone interested in dreams and dream analysis.
Follow your dreams: download Freud: A Very Short Introduction.Public Domain (P)2001 Blackstone Audio Inc.Critic reviews
The recording is okay, except for the actor cannot pronounce French and Italian citations properly. But I guess one cannot have everything at the same time. He's done an excellent job with this recording, anyway.
Freud
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It must be of interest
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Intereating , a bit hard to finish
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Would you listen to The Interpretation of Dreams again? Why?
It's great to go to the original writings of Freud, especially to the Interpretation of Dreams, which is one of the founding texts of psychoanalysis as a whole and the book of which Freud was most proud. Freud even updated it a number of times as he progressed his theoretical framework in the following decades because he felt it was such an important text.People who regard Freud's theory of dreams as quackery often forget that he was a neurologist before he developed psychoanalysis. It's a very demanding listen but Freud was a clear and compelling writer. The Interpretation of Dreams makes you realise the profundity and sophistication of Freud's thought as a whole.
A difficult but brilliant book
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Hard to follow
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The reading style does not help. It is seriously bland. I have listened to other non-fiction audiobooks where I've begun to believe that the reader is the author as he/she is so keen to enthuse and persuade. Not so with this recording - no particular point is emphasised, there's no sense of wonder - it all adds to the feeling of arrogance. Towards the end I felt a sense of doom whenever I heard this man's voice.
And a niggling point - the sections in French and Latin get quite long in the opening chapter and if they're anything like the brief Italian bit, they're not particularly well-pronounced. Why not just translate them?
Disappointing
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Parts of the book were very nearly interesting. Sigmund had clearly studied the subject long and hard, listened to countless dreams of other people, and had been brutally honest about his own dreams. And those recurring dream incidents that so many people have (losing teeth, flying, and being caught in public with virtually no clothes on), are always interesting to hear. Well almost always. Freud has an uncanny gift of turning interesting stories into turgid, yawn-inducing, time-wastage.
But he seems to have a special key (God knows where he acquired it) that he uses to interpret dreams: mostly they are about sexual intercourse and masturbation. My favourite example was a scene in which someone entered an alleyway between two houses, almost incidental to the account. For Freud there was no question - this was a reference to the vagina! Really? And this is what makes him evangelical.
Namely, he imposes his own arbitrarily constructed blue-print onto the dream (like a fundamentalist preacher). He links it back to something that happened to the dreamer within the last 24 hours (i.e., invents some contemporary relevance), then passes his judgement (the most pious hobby). Not to mention, that the smug certainty of his pronouncements is gut-punchingly painful.
I thought Freud was supposed to be a genius. I have yet to read his other books, but unless there is serious improvement, I wonder why anyone thinks he’s a genius at anything other than convincing the world he’s a genius.
Still, Sigmund Freud has forever undermined one of my long-cherished convictions: that reading primary sources is always worthwhile.
Fundamentalist Preaching
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In conclusion, I would not recommend this book if you want an overview of Freud?s theories. \"A short introduction to Freud\" (available on Audible) should suffice. I enjoyed it.
Mad as a box of frogs
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