If the text hints at a character having conflicting desires or different layers or something then yes, they have a subconscious they're not so much aware of. So I wrote that wrong.
The thing is, the essay was not analysing the text at that point. It was analysing the illustration. In the illustration there were two sleeping women and a circle above them with goblins in it. It concluded this meant the circle was what they were dreaming, ie the contents of their subconscious. and then it analysed it. at great length. for several pages. But the circle was an illustration. It was not a dream. And it was not a dream belonging to those characters. And so it was not a window into their subconscious. And we could have skipped those pages with no loss to our understanding of the poem Goblin Market.
Also, if I'm reading a story and treating characters as people for the length of the story I'll happily read them as if they've got hearts and stomachs and a subconscious. But if I'm close reading a text for class they only have a subconscious, or indeed a stomach, if I can provide a quote to back up my interpretation of them as stomach owning persons. ... which in Goblin Market I'm pretty sure I can on account of it being about eating. ANYway, is just, treating text as people strikes me as odd in some contexts.
no subject
Date: 2011-10-14 05:03 pm (UTC)The thing is, the essay was not analysing the text at that point. It was analysing the illustration. In the illustration there were two sleeping women and a circle above them with goblins in it. It concluded this meant the circle was what they were dreaming, ie the contents of their subconscious. and then it analysed it. at great length. for several pages. But the circle was an illustration. It was not a dream. And it was not a dream belonging to those characters. And so it was not a window into their subconscious. And we could have skipped those pages with no loss to our understanding of the poem Goblin Market.
Also, if I'm reading a story and treating characters as people for the length of the story I'll happily read them as if they've got hearts and stomachs and a subconscious. But if I'm close reading a text for class they only have a subconscious, or indeed a stomach, if I can provide a quote to back up my interpretation of them as stomach owning persons. ... which in Goblin Market I'm pretty sure I can on account of it being about eating. ANYway, is just, treating text as people strikes me as odd in some contexts.