Sigmund Freud's Essay "The Uncanny" (1919): Christmas Trauma as a Matrix of Neurosis and the Archetype of the Unconscious
Introduction: "Unheimliche" as the Return of Repressed Childish Horror
Sigmund Freud's essay "The Uncanny" ("Das Unheimliche", 1919) is not just a literary-psychanalytic etude but a fundamental work on the aesthetics and psychology of fear, where the Christmas story by E.T.A. Hoffmann "The Sandman" becomes a key clinical and cultural example. Freud uses this novella to illustrate his thesis that the "uncanny" is not something fundamentally new or alien, but the return of a long-known, but repressed childhood experience, often associated with trauma. In this context, Christmas serves not as a festival, but as a chronological marker fixing the moment of a psychological catastrophe.
The Concept of "Unheimliche": Linguistic and Psychoanalytic Analysis
Freud begins with a linguistic analysis of the German word unheimlich (uncanny, eerie). He shows that its antonym heimlich means not only "domestic, cozy" but also "hidden, secret". Thus, unheimlich is not just "not-domestic", but something that should have remained hidden, but has come out. This semantic field leads to the psychoanalytic core: the uncanny is that which was once heimlich, familiar, part of the "home" of the psyche (such as childhood fears, complexes), but has been repressed and now returns in a distorted, alien form, causing anxiety.
Hoffmann's "The Sandman" as a Model of Christmas Trauma
Freud analyzes Hoffmann's novella in detail, highlighting the structurally forming elements of neurosis.
Christmas as the scene of the initial trauma: The culmination of little Nathan's childhood fears occurs precisely on Christmas Eve. He, waiting for gifts, spies on his father and the eerie lawyer Koppelius (a prototype of the Sandman — a mythical creature throwing sand in children's eyes to make them fall asleep). The boy witnesses a terrifying alchemical experiment associated with violence against ...
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