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Nathaniel Hawthorne Research Paper

Decent Essays

Jasmine Belloso
Dr. Daniel Horner
English 101
January 25, 2016

The Mind The mind is the cognitive function of the brain that allows a being to have subjective awareness and intentionality towards their surroundings, to perceive and respond towards experiences, and to have consciousness through thinking and feeling. Through the development of the cognitive sciences such as philosophy, religion, and psychology there has been a further understanding of the mind and the phenomena of its capabilities. Psychology is regarded as cognitive science that has a significant part of literature, and Sigmund Freud has made great contributions to psychology through his psychoanalytic theory, that is regarded as an inseparable part of literature. Freud …show more content…

Through this psychoanalysis, the reader and the critic of literature have the opportunity to analyze central themes and character behaviors through abnormal psychology. Authors such as Nathaniel Hawthorne’s works were an external expression of his unconscious mind that reveals past experiences, hidden motivations or repressed desires. Nathaniel Hawthorne was a literary writer that produced works that challenged the conscious and captured the battle between a person id, ego, and superego. Writings such as The Scarlet Letter, the characters go through transformations and specific deteriorations in their personalities. The characters are under the influence of their ids or egos, and on occasion, they engage their superego acting as their conscience, and this an ongoing battle between their id, ego, and …show more content…

One could not discover the cause by taking the pulse count or examining the blood” (Hoffman). The main focus of psychoanalysis is to bring out any repressed feelings, memories that are hidden in the catacombs of the mind, and unvoiced thoughts of each individual. Freud’s main focus in his studies was on the causes of repression. Hoffman interprets repression by stating the following:
Our brief analysis of the unconscious suggested that repression is the mechanism by which unconscious impulses or drives are forbidden access to conscious life. [...] Only those impulses whose satisfaction it is apparently possible to put off are repressed. [...] The repressed instinct does not “give up” when it is denied entrance into consciousness. It expresses itself digressively, disguisedly, in “derivatives

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