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a series of thoughts, images, and sensations occurring in a persons mind during sleep The Oxford College Dictionary The royal road to the unconscious Sigmund Freud facts that are invaluable for diagnosis Carl Jung
Sigmund Freud
Carl Jung
Freddy Krueger
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The relation of dreams to the waking state Dream material Use of insignificant, worthless details rather than important, urgent, far-reaching ones
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Dreams have at their disposal recollections which are inaccessible to the waking state. Sigmund Freud
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The dream clearly prefer impressions of the last few days (Robert, Strumpell, Hildebrandt; also WeedHallam) [The dream] makes a selection in accordance with principles other than those governing our waking memory, in that it recalls not essential and important, but subordinate and disregarded items Dreams can implement the earliest impressions of childhood, and can bring forth those details (even if trivial), and, in waking life, we believe them to have been long forgotten
Latent dream-content
Therapy attempted to interpret manifest dream-
we see that at least half a mans life is passed in [the nocturnal] realm, that consciousness has its roots there, and that the unconscious operates in and out of waking existence No one doubts the importance of conscious experience; why then should we question the importance of unconscious happenings?
The Statistics of Dreams Mary Whiton Collins One male, one female
Subject to study for 6-8 weeks
morning sleep However, another calculation suggest that vivid dreams are by no means confined to morning hours
Induced early Christians to distrust their sleeping visions as possibly satanic (From a large study) a considerable number of [repeated dreams in childhood are] nightmares
Sleep paralysis
Claims that dreams are simply the minds reaction to physiological stimulation
Ex: a cold toe could cause a dreamers heart rate to
quicken in order to warm the toe. The mental effect would play a scene of the dreamer running up a staircase (associated with quicker heart rate and faster breathing). Its regrettable that the actuality of the unconscious should still be a matter of controversy. Carl Jung
Salvador Dali
A means of inner wisdom or newfound awareness upon reflection and notation of recurring elements
An excerpt:
Walking down an abandoned road, I see an ancient
church to my right. Its roof has been blown out by what couldve only been a volley of blitzkrieg, exposing its rafters. From those rafters, hang the hooded victims of a madman.
Recurring Themes (top 3) Isolation/Desolation Loss of Control Family & Darkness (Tied)
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Plot summary:
A college student travels across the countrys climates
encountering serial killers, fortune tellers, clowns, zombies and agitated bears.
Whether reality or a result of my drunken stupor, Fargo had become a favela. Lawns ceased to exist, roads narrowed, and houses had somehow condensed into tall, red and yellow cabins. Perhaps even stranger, were the streams of confused citizens flowing from the residences without purpose. I knew I had somewhere to be, somewhere to go, but it eluded me. Instead of lingering between streams, I decided to join my fellow travelers; I imagine the man behind me, whose rancid breath patted the back of my neck, didnt notice the addition. Police were dispersed sporadically in the streets, grimacing at civilians. The red and blue flashing lights of their squad cars absorbed all offering from the Sun above. We marched, aimlessly, toward some unknown destination like a drunken Trail of Tears.
accompany
Family always comes first, and my dream persona never flinched when it came to defending them Death is either a fear or something Ive become accustomed to having frequently happen in my life
Cindy Dr.
Nichols
Betsy Birmingham
Calkins, Mary Whiton. "Statistics of Dreams." American Journal of Psychology. 5.3 (1893): 311-343. Web. 25 Oct. 2012. Freud, Sigmund, and J. Strachley. The Interpretation of Dreams. Philadelphia, PA: Basic Books, 1955. Print. Glaskin, Katie. "Dreams, memory, and the ancestors: creativity, culture, and the science of sleep." Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 17.1 (2011): 44-62. Web. 19 Oct. 2012. Glaskin, Katie. "Innovation and Ancestral Revelation: The Case of Dreams." The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 11.2 (2005): 297-314. Web. 30 Oct. 2012. Hacking, Ian. "Dreams in Place. "Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. 59.3 (2001): 245-60. Web. 15 Oct. 2012. Hodes, Matthew. "Dreams Reconsidered." Anthropology Today. 5.6 (1989): 6-8. Web. 19 Oct. 2012. Jewell, James Ralph. "The Psychology of Dreams."American Journal of Psychology. 16.1 (1905): 1-34. Web. 19 Oct. 2012. Jung, Carl. "Dream-Analysis in Its Practical Application ." Trans. Array Modern Man in Search of a Soul. W.S. Dell and Cary F. Baynes. Orlando: Halcourt Books, 1955. 1-27. Print. Peterson, Margaret. "High School Dreamers: Using Mind Movies as Inspiration for Artwork." Art Education. November (2002): 33-40. Web. 19 Oct. 2012. Schiebler, Ralf. Dal:The Reality of Dreams. Munich, London, New York: Prestel Verlag, 2005. Print. Stewart, Charles. "Erotic Dreams and Nightmares from Antiquity to the Present." Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 8.2 (2002): 279-309. Web. 1 Nov. 2012. Tyson, Lois. "Psychoanalytic Criticism." Trans. Array Critical Theory Today: A User-Friendly Guide. . 2nd ed. New York: Routledge, 2006. 11-52. Print. Vanhoenacker, Joseph H, and Edward S Friedrichs. "Happiness, Sleep, and Creativity ." Science News . 148.12 (1995): 179. Web. 19 Oct. 2012. Water, Marjorie Van de. "The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of." The Science News-Letter. 20.558 (1931): 390-91. Web. 15 Oct. 2012.