http://www.hplovecraft.com/writings/texts/fiction/cc.aspx (a link to the 1928 short story)
From a Freudian perspective, Great Cthulhu could be seen as a progenitor or "father figure," since it is both immeasurably older than humanity and the most prominent member of its race. In addition, Great Cthulhu is massive, said to be miles high and compared to a mountain. The helplessness that humans feel in its awesome presence is reminiscent of the fear a son has for his father. Thus, the scene in which the Norwegian sailor Gustaf Johansen desperately chooses to ram a steamboat into Cthulhu is clearly symbolic of the child's desire to kill their hated father. However, as in Freud's "Oedipus complex," the child realizes that overcoming his father is impossible - Cthulhu reforms shortly after having its head cleaved through by the ship. And so instead the child takes on the qualities of its "father." Besides being enormous, hungry, and inhuman, one of Cthulhu main qualities is its maddening presence, which warps the dreams and minds of sensitive individuals. Thus, in taking on the quality of Cthulhu's madness, Johansen goes insane (as does his shipmate William Briden). It is interesting to note that Lovecraft's father went insane when Lovecraft was very young, and so the author grew up under the shadow of the possible inheritance of his father's mental illness.
the course of the story allows Cthulhu's presence to infect the dreams of sensitive humans, causing horrible nightmares, suicides, increased cult activity, and general unrest across the world. In this case, the earthquake and rise of R'lyeh represent the human psyche's failure to fully remove the memory of Cthulhu by repression. The suicides and insane behaviors that follow are the symptoms of humanity's negative emotions being channeled elsewhere in other parts of life, since the people affected are not aware that Cthulhu is the cause. The couplet discussed in the story, "That is not dead which can eternal lie/And with strange aeons even death may die," summarizes the nature of repression - the repressed bad memory never truly goes away, it just remains hidden until a time when it can emerge and affect the person once again.
To take the metaphor even further, the opening of Cthulhu's tomb has strong connotations of sexuality in young children. The alien and untrustworthy geometry of R'lyeh hints at the obscure and mystifying nature of sexual intercourse to the mind of a child. The way in which the crew of the Emma resolve to open the massive door out of curiosity, despite their growing feelings of fear, is not unlike the resolve of young children to uncover the truth about sex (where babies come from), even though knowing sexual material too early would be harmful for them. The massive door itself and the deep darkness beyond represent the female genitalia, and it is then the author's aversion to such which is evidenced by the description of the awful smell and the darkening of the sun. The tomb itself in this case symbolizes the missing "mother figure," which the crew desire to enter, but they are stopped by the presence of the Cthulhu "father figure" which emerges from within. Finally, the "child" crew's worst fears are realized as they are devoured by Cthulhu, symbolizing their punishment and the realization of the "castration anxiety" they felt upon reaching the island.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHuY2wXTd0o (a link to the trailer for the 2005 film adaptation)
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Really cool post, Bren. I'm a big Lovecraft fan so this was an awesome connection to read about. It also got me thinking about "Beyond The Wall of Sleep" sleep which you mentioned...you could stretch it to view possible connections with the type of technology certain early psychologists were using to record and capture "hysteric" behavior. (In "Wall of Sleep" the narrator tries to create a system of radio telecommunication with his patient's dream world to better understand his hysterical reactions. It gets super trippy). He does directly mention Freud dismissively, and concedes that, "man, when lost to terrestrial consciousness, is indeed sojourning in another and uncorporeal life of far different nature from the life we know; and of which only the slightest and most indistinct memories linger after waking." While Lovecraft is referring to a different type of memory (that does not come from waking experience) I think there is also a bit of Freudian thought worked in there, particularly about repressed thoughts affecting reality's actions.
ReplyDeleteYes, he definitely seem to be in dialogue with Freud, even if he wants to disagree with certain aspects of his thinking.
ReplyDeleteI was actually originally planning on writing about "Beyond the Wall of Sleep," but I didn't want my analysis to directly contradict Lovecraft within his own story because I'm weird like that, although I hadn't thought so much about the repression aspect to it. Also, there are a lot of in-depth analyses of Lovecraft's work and psychological profiling of him out there already, so I tried to keep mine as tame as possible. I threw in the part about aversion to female gentalia as a nod to the tons other analyses I've heard of that basically peg Lovecraft as gyno/sexophobic -something his wife might have disagreed with. There's one essay on Lovecraft I read recently that makes a point of proving that he had a fixation on excrement... Definitely some Freudian aspects to that, too.
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