Abstract
An autobiographical interpretation of latent meanings in Freud’s Interpretation of Dreams is undertaken in order to explore oedipal themes in Freud’s writing and their role in his resistance to writing the book. By looking at how the book performs its message, in presenting a collection of Freud’s personal dreams that talk to each other and inspire meaning-making, we can see how readers are drawn into the role of interpreters/analysts. This process makes the oedipal myth palpable long before Freud mentions it. It also illustrates an analytic process that analysts are all required to follow. Finally, the process reveals something in Freud that could be apprehended only after his ideas were conveyed—the unending process of interpretation, in which every conclusion gives rise to new ideas, inspiring new conclusions.
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