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El chiste y su relación con lo…
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El chiste y su relación con lo inconsciente (original 1905; édition 1969)

par Sigmund Freud, Luis López-Ballesteros y de Torres

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"Wit and Its Relation to the Unconscious" is Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic examination of what makes something funny. From the father of psychoanalysis we get an interesting argument that at the heart of humor is the need to satisfy ones unconscious desires. Freud explains through numerous examples how jokes allow us a release from our inhibitions and provide significant satisfaction of the desire for pleasure. Building upon his earlier work, "The Interpretation of Dreams," Freud draws parallels to dreaming, neuroses, and psychopathology. A captivating work of psychoanalysis, "Wit and Its Relation to the Unconscious" gives great insight into Freud's theories and the nature of humor in the human mind.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:IrenePelaez
Titre:El chiste y su relación con lo inconsciente
Auteurs:Sigmund Freud
Autres auteurs:Luis López-Ballesteros y de Torres
Info:Madrid Alianza Editorial [1969]
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Le mot d'esprit et sa relation à l'inconscient par Sigmund Freud (1905)

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This was a very interesting study by Freud about the nature of humor, comedy, and jokes. It was different from his other major, and even minor, pieces- and herein lies its strength and weakness. Although it's dated now and the scientific relevance is dubious in nature, the ideas that permeate through this (and the analysis) I feel are still worth denoting.

3 stars. ( )
  DanielSTJ | May 22, 2020 |
Sigmund Freud‘s Il motto di spirito e la sua relazione con l'inconscio (Jokes and their relation to the unconscious). A very good book, the differences between different genres of humor are interesting. This book wises people up to humor and its functions, structures and social influence. I didn’t like the link between jokes and repressed sexual impulses, it felt too forced and unnatural, especially when applied to some kinds of jokes. ( )
  Aimapotis | Jan 3, 2017 |
Freud had first discussed jokes in his work on dreams, drawing upon the relationship--and the fact that so many dreams really are jokes had been observed. This dates back to 1899. Freud also credits and draws upon the work of Theodor Lipps, the Munich professor who introduced the term 'Einfulung" [empathy]. Among others, Freud also credits Kuno Fisher, whose definition provides many windows and doors: "A joke is a playful judgment". [10]

Once Freud's structural view of the mind had been developed, his collection of the material for this book on the function of Jokes began in earnest.

Much of this material plays off linguistics. For example, "Traduttore--Traditore!" [Translator--Traitor!] Fortunately, this translation does very well with the German-English, minimizing clumsy periphrases but adding clarifications with care -- "care-ifications" (Sorry, could not help myself, after reading the Witzig-Scherz "strange fatality" in which German and English terms never seem to coincide).[7] And even the German "Humor" often used by itself, but in English is rarely used without "sense of".

Freud takes on the complex psychological processes and relationships invoked by Jokes, showing how they appear and are used. After analyzing examples, he theorizes "what it is that jokes achieve" in the service of their purpose. "They make possible the satisfaction of an instinct (whether lustful or hostile) in the face of an obstacle that stands in its way." [101]
  keylawk | Dec 31, 2013 |
150 FREU 12
  luvucenanzo06 | Aug 21, 2023 |
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Freud, Sigmundauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Strachey, JamesTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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Wer einmal Anlaß gehabt hat, sich in der Literatur bei Ästhetikern und Psychologen zu erkundigen, welche Aufklärung über Wesen und Beziehungen des Witzes gegeben werden kann, der wird wohl zugestehen müssen, daß die philosophische Bemühung dem Witz lange nicht in dem Maße zu teil geworden ist, welches er durch seine Rolle in unserem Geistesleben verdient.
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"Wit and Its Relation to the Unconscious" is Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic examination of what makes something funny. From the father of psychoanalysis we get an interesting argument that at the heart of humor is the need to satisfy ones unconscious desires. Freud explains through numerous examples how jokes allow us a release from our inhibitions and provide significant satisfaction of the desire for pleasure. Building upon his earlier work, "The Interpretation of Dreams," Freud draws parallels to dreaming, neuroses, and psychopathology. A captivating work of psychoanalysis, "Wit and Its Relation to the Unconscious" gives great insight into Freud's theories and the nature of humor in the human mind.

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