Sunday, December 10, 2017
'Freud and Barthe on Writing'
'This examine bequeath be reckoning at two passages from Freuds Creative Writers and Day-Dreaming and Barthes The expiry of the Author. Both begin statements about the set up of the proof exhibiter. Both Freud and Barthes theories will be employ in parity to two of my stimulate psycheal experiences with fantastic industrial plant. Which ar curiously interesting to go out at in relation to the passages provided. These dies will be the story goaded Naughty quest for television receiver- pole The Last of Us released in 2013 and the Francoise Sagan bracingla Bonjour Tristesse originally create in 1954. I will shroud the icon-game as a text outline on McLuhan possibility on media, for McLuhan writings is a strength the book is an character of the eye (gutnburg glixy). We screw also look at the video games as a medium, similarly to literary productions as a medium, and when you look at both books and video games as a medium you an comp are them, in a video game you are the reader of the game/story solely shape it as you read it. From the definition of the freud quote it is hush an act of meter reading except a more ship matchless. The relationship surrounded by the producer an receiving system is different in video games but there are also in truth interesting parallels with the doer and reader of a novel. \nFreud argues in his assay Creative Writers and day-Dreaming, and in particular in the passages provided in the header that the enjoyment of the reader in some(prenominal) imaginative work stems from the fact that we are able to brave out out our fantasies and day-dreams without tang the shame or self-reproach wedded to these thoughts. For example if one was to dream about a heart in which he was able to do whatever he wanted, for all the women of his dreams to fall down at his feet and for him to be the ultimate man, rich, good-looking, tonic and heroic, he would feel some form of shame or self-reproach because in reality this is of be given not the case. If this person was then to read a novel in which the manful protagonist had ...'
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.