Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality

Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality
Author Sigmund Freud
Original title Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie
Translator James Strachey
Subject Human sexuality
Publisher 1905
Media type Print
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Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality (German: Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie), sometimes titled Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex, is a 1905 work by Sigmund Freud which advanced his theory of sexuality, in particular its relation to childhood.

Synopsis

Freud's book covered three main areas: sexual perversions; childhood sexuality; and puberty.[1]

The Sexual Aberrations

Freud began his first essay, on "The Sexual Aberrations", by distinguishing between the sexual object and the sexual aim — noting that deviations from the norm could occur with respect to both.[2] The sexual object is therein defined as a desired object, and the sexual aim as what acts are desired with said object.

Discussing the choice of children and animals as sex objects — pedophilia and bestiality — he notes that most people would prefer to limit these perversions to the insane "on aesthetic grounds" but that they exist in normal people also. He also explores deviations of sexual aims, as in the tendency to linger over preparatory sexual aspects such as looking and touching.[3]

Turning to neurotics, Freud emphasised that "in them tendencies to every kind of perversion can be shown to exist as unconscious forces...neurosis is, as it were, the negative of perversion".[4] Freud also makes the point that people who are behaviorally abnormal are always sexually abnormal in his experience but that many people who are normal behaviorally otherwise are sexually abnormal also.[5]

Freud concluded that "a disposition to perversions is an original and universal disposition of the human sexual instinct and that...this postulated constitution, containing the germs of all the perversions, will only be demonstrable in children“.[6]

Infantile Sexuality

His second essay, on "Infantile Sexuality", argues that children have sexual urges, from which adult sexuality only gradually emerges via psychosexual development.[7]

Looking at children, Freud identified many forms of infantile sexual emotions, including thumb sucking, autoeroticism, and sibling rivalry.[8]

The Transformations of Puberty

In his third essay, "The Transformations of Puberty" Freud formalised the distinction between the 'fore-pleasures' of infantile sexuality and the 'end-pleasure' of sexual intercourse.[9]

He also demonstrated how the adolescent years consolidate sexual identity under the dominance of the genitals.[10]

Summary

Freud sought to link to his theory of the unconscious put forward in The Interpretation of Dreams (1899) and his work on hysteria by positing sexuality as the driving force of both neuroses (through repression) and perversion.

In its final version, the "Three Essays" also included the concepts of penis envy, castration anxiety, and the Oedipus complex.

Textual history

The Three Essays underwent a series of rewritings and additions over a twenty-year succession of editions[11] — changes which expanded its size by one half, from 80 to 120 pages.[12] The sections on the sexual theories of children and on pregenitality only appeared in 1915, for example,[13] while such central terms as castration complex or penis envy were also later additions.[14]

As Freud himself conceded in 1923, the result was that "it may often have happened that what was old and what was more recent did not admit of being merged into an entirely uncontradictory whole",[15] so that, whereas at first "the accent was on a portrayal of the fundamental difference between the sexual life of children and of adults", subsequently "we were able to recognize the far-reaching approximation of the final outcome of sexuality in children (in about the fifth year) to the definitive form taken by it in adults".[16]

Jacques Lacan considered such a process of change as evidence of the way that "Freud's thought is the most perennially open to revision...a thought in motion".[17]

Translations

There are two English translations, one by A.A. Brill in 1910, another by James Strachey in 1949 published by Imago Publishing[18] Strachey's translation is generally considered superior, including by Freud himself.[19]

See also

Notes

  1. J-M Quinodoz, Reading Freud (2005) p. 58.
  2. Sigmund Freud, On Sexuality (PFL 7) p. 45–46.
  3. Quinodoz, p. 59.
  4. Freud, On Sexuality p. 155
  5. The Basic Writings of Sigmund Freud, pp. 562–563. Random House 1938.
  6. Freud, On Sexuality p. 155 and p. 87.
  7. Ernest Jones: The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud (Penguin 1961) p. 315.
  8. Gay, p. 147.
  9. Freud, On Sexuality p. 131.
  10. Gay, p. 148.
  11. Angela Richards, "Editor's Introduction", Sigmund Freud, On Sexuality (PFL 7) p. 34
  12. Peter Gay, Freud: A life For Our Time (London 1989) p. 148.
  13. Richards, p. 35.
  14. Richards, p. 186 and p. 238n.
  15. Freud, On Sexuality p. 307
  16. Freud, On Sexuality p. 307.
  17. Jacques-Alain Miller ed., The Seminar of Jacques Lacan: Book I (Cambridge 1988) p. 1.
  18. Freud, Sigmund: Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality. Basic Books 1962, pp. ix–xi.
  19. Gay, p. 572–575.

References

External links

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