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Personality and The Psychoanalytic Perspective

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Title: Personality and The Psychoanalytic Perspective


1
Personality and The Psychoanalytic Perspective

2
Warm Up
  • What is your personality? Choose at least 5 words
    that you think describe your personality

3
Personality and the Four Perspectives
  • What is personality?
  • Thinking
  • Feeling
  • Acting
  • Theories of Personality
  • 1. Psychoanalytic
  • 2. Trait
  • 3. Humanistic
  • 4. Social Cognitive

4
The Psychoanalytic Perspective
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Personality
  • unconscious conflicts motivations
  • early childhood sexuality experiences.
  • Reviewwhat is repression?
  • Two main motives
  • Sex
  • Aggression.

5
The Psychoanalytic Perspective
  • Psychoanalysis
  • Freuds theory unconscious motivations influence
    personality
  • techniques used to uncover unconscious
    motivations which may be causing a psychological
    disorder.
  • Freud must understand your unconscious to fix
    psych. problems (depression, anxiety, etc.)

6
Unconscious vs. Preconscious
  • Unconscious
  • Freud unconscious stash of mostly unacceptable
    thoughts, wishes, feelings and memories.
  • Repressed! We are unaware of it.
  • Source of dreams
  • Contemporary viewpoint unconscious information
    processing of which we are unaware.

7
Unconscious vs. Preconscious
  • Preconscious info that isnt conscious, but is
    retrievable into conscious awareness.
  • NOT repressed.
  • Ex memories we can call up at any time - phone
    number, best friends last name, etc.

8
Structure of Our Personality According to Freud
  • Iceberg analogy
  • Conscious v. Unconscious
  • Three parts to our psyche
  • Ego
  • Id
  • Superego

9
Parts of Personality According to Freud
  • Id
  • biggest part of unconscious
  • drives and instincts (biological, sexual, and
    aggressive)
  • immediate gratification
  • pleasure principle seeks pleasure, avoids pain

10
Parts of Personality According to Freud
  • Superego conscience, morality, right wrong,
    socially acceptable
  • Do whats right vs. what is selfish
  • Mostly unconscious
  • We have unconscious ideals, but are also aware of
    our conscience
  • Pushes you towards perfection.
  • Develops around 4 or 5

11
Parts of Personality According to Freud
  • Ego the boss
  • mostly conscious part
  • mediates conflict between id and superego
  • Judgment, planning, control, long-term
    consequences
  • Reality principle
  • satisfying the ids desires in ways that will
    bring pleasure rather than pain.
  • e.g. you might want this NOW but what are
    long-term effects?

12
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13
Pleasure Seeking Impulses (Id) vs.Internalized
Social Restraints (Superego) personality
14
Personality Development
  • Freud
  • personality develops during your first few years.
  • adults conflicts come from unresolved conflicts
    from early childhood (often related to conflicts
    in psychosexual development.)
  • Psychosexual Stages childhood stages of
    development when (according to Freud,) the ids
    pleasure-seeking energies are focused on distinct
    erogenous zones.

15
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16
Know the Psychosexual Stages
17
Personality Development and Conflict
  • Fixation
  • a lingering focus of the Id (pleasure-seeking) at
    an earlier psychosexual stage.
  • Occurs when those sexual needs are overindulged
    or deprived.
  • Ex Anal Retentive, oral fixation, etc.

18
Conflict/Fixation in the Oral Stage
  • Oral stage
  • sexual pleasure infant gets from sucking,
    biting, and chewing.
  • Conflict?
  • when child is weaned off of breast or bottle
  • traumatic separation anxiety.
  • Fixation in this stage leads to
  • 1. Oral dependent personality gullible,
    passive or dependent.
  • 2. Oral aggressive personality sarcastic,
    argumentative personality.
  • Adults with oral fixation may smoke, drink,
    chew pens, etc. when they get anxious.

19
Conflict/Fixation in the Anal Stage
  • Anal stage
  • sexual pleasure child receives from being able
    to control defecation (pooping) at the anus.
  • Conflict?
  • during toilet training
  • training is too strict and inflexible or too
    lenient ? child becomes fixated at that stage
  • Fixation in this stage leads to
  • 1. Anal retentive personality compulsive
    cleanliness, orderliness, etc. OR
  • Anal Expulsive personality disorganized, messy,
    hot temper. The Anal Retentive Chef

20
Conflict/Fixation During the Phallic Stage (Focus
on Genitals)
  • The Oedipus Complex boys develop
  • sexual desires --gt mother
  • feelings of jealousy and hatred --gt father
  • Schick Commercial
  • Castration anxiety
  • boys become afraid Father will cut off their
    genitalia as punishment for desiring mother.
    Father rival
  • Leads toeventual repression of feelings towards
    mother and identification with rival parent
    (father).
  • Identification process by which children
    incorporate their parents values into their
    developing superegos.
  • Electra Complex
  • Girls version (desire father, compete with
    mother).
  • Penis envy - analogous to castration anxiety

21
Latency Stage
  • Ages 6 to 12
  • sexual feelings are repressed.
  • Freud said
  • this is when children put energy into forming
    social relationships and learning new tasks.
  • If child does not fulfill their own expectations
    they may feel inferior.

22
Genital Stage
  • Adolescence.
  • One develops warm feelings towards opposite sex
    and sexual attraction and intimate relationships
    with opposite sex.
  • Freud a smooth period for those with little
    energy fixated in previous stages.

23
Personality and Dealing with Anxiety
  • The ego has to deal with anxiety from unconscious
    conflicts between id and superego.
  • At times to avoid anxiety it protects itself by
    using

24
Defense Mechanisms
  • methods that the ego uses to reduce anxiety.
  • Involves unconsciously distorting reality to
    make itself (you!) feel better.

25
10 Examples of Defense Mechanisms
  • 1. Repression banishes anxiety-arousing
    thoughts, feelings, and memories from
    consciousness.
  • Ex Child sexual abuse is forgotten.
  • 2. Regression when an individual returns to an
    earlier psychosexual stage, where some psychic
    energy remains fixated.
  • Ex When stressed someone may smoke or drink
    more (oral fixation).

26
Examples of Defense Mechanisms
  • 3. Reaction Formation ego unconsciously switches
    unacceptable impulses into their opposites.
    People will express opposite of their anxiety
    arousing feelings.
  • Ex Those with unacceptable homosexual impulses
    may become gay bashers.
  • 4. Projection when people disguise their own
    threatening impulses by attributing them to
    others.
  • Ex Husband who is cheating may suspect his
    wife of cheating and accuse her.

27
Examples of Defense Mechanisms
  • 5. Rationalization offering self-justifying
    explanations in place of the real, more
    threatening, unconscious reasons for ones
    actions.
  • Ex Justifying cheating on taxes by saying the
    government would only waste the money.
  • 6. Displacement shifting ones sexual or
    aggressive impulses to a more acceptable or less
    threatening object or personredirect anger at
    safer outlet.
  • Ex Angry at boss or supervisor and you take it
    out by yelling at spouse, who might take it out
    on the child, who then might kick the dog.

28
Examples of Defense Mechanisms
  • 7. Sublimation when people re-direct their
    unacceptable impulses into socially approved
    activities.
  • Ex Playing football to rechannel aggressive
    impulses.
  • 8. Intellectualization separating oneself from
    the emotions of a situation by focusing on the
    problem in a systematic factual way or in the
    abstract.
  • Ex A wife who learns her husband is dying of
    cancer tries to learn all she can about the
    disease, prognosis, treatment options, etc. She
    looks at it in a scientific way to avoid dealing
    with the emotions.

29
Examples of Defense Mechanisms
  • 9. Denial when a person denies threatening
    behavior or events are taking place.
  • Ex Person who is paralyzed in a horrible
    accident states emphatically I will walk again!
  • 10. Undoing idea that if you have unacceptable
    impulses/behavior you can undo or make it up by
    doing something.
  • Ex After cheating on wife, husband buys her
    jewelry.

30
DEFENSE MECHANISM SKIT ACTIVITY
  • Instructions
  • You will work with a partner for this activity.
    Each pair will be given two defense mechanisms.
  • Your task is to write and perform a short (30
    -60 second) skit in which you show a defense
    mechanism in action. Write skits for both defense
    mechanisms. Everyone will perform at least one.
  • Dont use the name of the defense mechanism in
    the skit, and dont tell us what it is. Make it
    clear enough that we can figure it out.
  • Be creative! One person should be clearly
    exhibiting the defense mechanism, while the other
    person interacts with them in some way or
    provokes them or talks about them etc. etc.

31
Methods for Tapping Into the Unconscious
  • Hypnosis Hypnotized patients would talk freely
    which allowed Freud access to unconscious
    conflicts.
  • Freud eventually turned away from hypnosis since
    not all patients reacted to it.
  • Hypnotic regression The therapy people often
    undergo to remember alien abductions, or other
    repressed memories.

32
Methods for Tapping Into the Unconscious
  • 2. Dreams considered the royal road to the
    unconscious.
  • Freuds book The Interpretation of Dreams was
    important
  • Manifest content (dream sequence or story)
    censored expression of the dreamers unconscious
    wishes.
  • Latent content - the unconscious, real meaning
    of the dream.
  • Psychoanalysis can uncover this latent content.

33
Methods for Tapping into The Unconscious
  1. Free Association patients relax, say whatever
    comes to their mind, no matter how trivial or
    embarrassing.

34
Methods for Tapping into The Unconscious
  • To Freud nothing you did or said was ever
    accidental Everything offered insights into the
    unconscious.
  • 4. Freudian Slips slips of the tongue or
    actions which may illustrate unconscious
    motives/feelings.
  • Ex Accidentally calling your wife mom
  • Ex Man sending a post card to his wife while
    on vacation which reads Wish you were her.
  • Freudian Slip
  • Freudian Slip 2

35
Psychoanalytic Personality Tests Assessing the
Unconscious
  • Projective Tests test which presents ambiguous
    (unclear) stimuli
  • How you interpret it reveals your unconscious
    (according to psychoanalysts)

36
Types of Projective Tests
  • Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) people express
    inner feelings/unconscious, through the stories
    they make up about ambiguous scenes.
  • Examiners look at
  • Content of stories
  • Emotion of stories
  • Other behavior/body language
  • Try it!
  • o What has led up to the event showno What is
    happening at the momento What the characters are
    thinking and feeling, ando What the outcome of
    the story was

37
House-Tree-Person
  • Draw a house, a tree and a person.
  • Lets interpret!
  • The house represents your feelings about your
    family
  • The tree portrays how weak/strong you feel
  • The person is youwhat is your self-concept? How
    do you see yourself?

38
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39
Types of Projective Tests
  • Rorschach Inkblot Test most widely used
    projective test, looks to identify peoples inner
    feelings by analyzing their interpretations of
    blots.

40
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41
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42
Neo-Freudians
  • Alfred Adler emphasized SOCIAL tensions in
    childhood rather than sexual tensions to explain
    personality.
  • Proposed idea of inferiority complex
  • inferiority during childhood causes individuals
    to overcompensate
  • significant achievements or antisocial
    tendencies.

43
Neo-Freudians
  • Carl Jung Came up with several important
    Psychoanalytic ideas including
  • Collective Unconscious idea that humans have a
    shared reservoir of memories from our species
    history.
  • Inherited memories were known as archetypes and
    can be seen in the common themes in religions,
    cultures, literature, etc.
  • Trickster- often represented by a clown or a
    magician
  • Hero fights the shadow archetype, or evil
    (dragon, monster)
  • Wise old man - guides the hero, reveals the
    collective unconscious to him

44
Neo-Freudians
  • Karen Horney brought a feminist perspective to
    psychoanalytic theory and sharply attacked the
    male bias she saw in Freuds work.
  • Argued against Freuds concept of penis envy.
  • She said Men experience womb envy jealous of
    female ability to give birth, reason men try to
    dominate women.
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