Forgot your password?  

Otto Rank Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Stephen Watt

This literature criticism consists of approximately 27 pages of analysis & critique of Otto Rank.
This section contains 7,960 words
(approx. 27 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Otto Rank - Critical Essay by Stephen Watt

Critical Essay by Stephen Watt

SOURCE: “O'Neill and Otto Rank: Doubles, ‘Death Instincts,’ and the Trauma of Birth,” in Comparative Drama, Vol. 20, No. 3, Fall, 1986, pp. 211-30.

In the following essay, Watt discusses Rank's version of psychoanalysis in relation to the dramas of Eugene O'Neill.

“You were born afraid.”

Mary Tyrone to Edmund

“But he's dead now [Major Melody]. And I ain't tired a bit. I'm fresh as a man new born.”

Con Melody

“She loves me. I'm not afraid! … She is warmly around me! She is my skin! She is my armor! Now I am born—I—the I!—one and indivisible.”

Dion Anthony

I

In one extremely defensive interior monologue in Eugene O'Neill's Strange Interlude (1928), Charles Marsden contemplates the widespread influence of Sigmund Freud's thought on the American intelligentsia. In doing so, Marsden also predicts what interpretive tools many readers of O'Neill's plays will employ when digging through...
(read more)

This section contains 7,960 words
(approx. 27 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Otto Rank - Critical Essay by Stephen Watt
Copyrights
Otto Rank - Critical Essay by Stephen Watt from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
Follow Us on Facebook
Homework Help