No Cover Image

Journal article 1046 views 192 downloads

120th anniversary event for ‘Dora’ telling her burning house dream to Freud

Julia Lockheart, Brigitte Holzinger, Katharina Adler, Deirdre Barrett, Dany Nobus, Zora Wessely, Mark Blagrove Orcid Logo

International Journal of Dream Research, Volume: 14, Issue: 2, Pages: 202 - 208

Swansea University Author: Mark Blagrove Orcid Logo

  • LockheartEtAl2021Dora.pdf

    PDF | Version of Record

    Released under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution License

    Download (1.34MB)

Abstract

This paper reports a DreamsID (Dreams Illustrated and Discussed) art science collaborative event held to commemorate the first dream told by Dora to Freud, in November 1900, during her psychoanalysis. As part of the online ‘Main stage’ schedule from the Swansea Science Festival, the event had partic...

Full description

Published in: International Journal of Dream Research
ISSN: 1866-7953
Published: Heidelberg Universitats Bibliothek Heidelberg 2021
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa57019
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract: This paper reports a DreamsID (Dreams Illustrated and Discussed) art science collaborative event held to commemorate the first dream told by Dora to Freud, in November 1900, during her psychoanalysis. As part of the online ‘Main stage’ schedule from the Swansea Science Festival, the event had participation from a worldwide audience, and contributions from expert panel members. That Dora’s dream is a poignant depiction of the distress and persecution in her teenage life can be seen from Dora’s free associations to the dream, but this is often overshadowed in readings of Freud’s case study by his speculative further interpretations of the dream, derived from Freud’s own associations. This paper includes the background to the case study, and the main points, themes and questions raised by the online discussion of the case study. These included the lack of emotion in the dream report; whether the dream was used by Dora to show to Freud the danger that she was in; the relationship between Dora’s dream, with its metaphor of the need to escape from the danger of fire, and dreams more widely of trauma and abuse; and the ethics of Dora’s real-life name having been made known without her permission. The painting produced live during the event is reproduced, with an account of the discussion of how the painting is composed. A link to the film of the event is provided.
Item Description: https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/IJoDR/article/view/77283
Keywords: Dream, Dream analysis, Dora, Freud, Psychoanalysis, Art, Ullman dream discussion technique
College: Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Issue: 2
Start Page: 202
End Page: 208