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The Interpretation of Dreams

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The Interpretation of Dreams

By: Sigmund Freud
Narrated by: Derek Le Page
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About this listen

The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud is one of the most significant books of the 20th century. Though dreams and their role in human consciousness have been a continuing thread in religion and art and life down the centuries, Freud's look at the subject through the prism of his emerging practice and study of psychoanalysis provided a startlingly new and challenging perspective. First published in German in 1899, it sold slowly; but over the following decade he revised and expanded it in response to his experiences working with patients, reviewing his own dreams, and discussions and debates with colleagues. It was translated into numerous languages.

In this extensive work he considers the meaning of dreams experienced by individuals generation after generation: dreams of flying, of death, of anger, of sex, of fear, of power. What do they signify, in general terms and in relation to individuals and their own personal situations? In this seminal book, Freud relates and discusses case histories and the effects of analysis. The remembered dreams have navigated the various passages of unconscious and preconscious filters to emerge into daylight, undergoing internal censorship and wish fulfilment and change and many other factors. So what are these dreams really saying or revealing? What anxiety or hope are they signaling? Sexuality plays a key role - this book contains the first emergence of Freud's Oedipus complex, among other sexual issues.

The Interpretation of Dreams is not an easy book - Freud himself produced an abridged version. But its influence on the 20th century, and particularly on Western awareness and society, cannot be underestimated. This classic translation of The Interpretation of Dreams by A. A. Brill dates from 1932 and contains all the major revisions made by Freud, and his footnotes. It has an important place in the audio recordings of Freud's major work, read clearly by Derek Le Page for Ukemi Audiobooks.

Public Domain (P)2017 Ukemi Productions Ltd
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Still an important book

I have enjoyed this book. It is often said that Freud is outdated and that he tends to explain everything with sexual repression, and although I am not going to refute these statements, I am going to state that he has made an impressive stand with his Interpretation of Dreams.

Whereas many (old) sources approach dreams by assigning a general meaning to the different images as seen in the dream, Freud explores the experience and association he himself has in relation to these images. This approach turns dream-symbols into personal phenomena and gateways into one’s own psyche. This approach is the true backbone of this book and although Freud is often vague and inconsistent, the idea that a dream is to be seen as the reflection of the mind of the dreamer probably still holds ground today!

The narrator reads clearly and the book consists of several footnotes that expand on the text itself. As is so often the case, Audibe has not named the different sections but has labelled them 1 to 120.

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5 people found this helpful

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It's the Freudian brain at work.

A very long book, worth the dedication to finish it. Hours of entertainment, a fascinating look into psychiatry.

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6 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars

Freud Genius Work

Derek Le Page gives a first-rate reading in the personality of Freud, with good German pronunciation.

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Utter codswallop

That is twenty six hours of my life that I really am never going to get back. Some say Freud spurred on psychoanalysis so far only because people hated him and were so determined to prove him wrong, and honestly I completely agree.

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2 people found this helpful