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Psychology
The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud

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Psychology3.836K ratings·Published 1900

The Interpretation of Dreams

by Sigmund Freud

Pages688
DifficultyAdvanced
ToneInventive
CategoryPsychology
Kotapo editors

Editorial review

Freud's specific theories of dreams have not aged especially well, but the book is still worth reading as one of the founding texts of modern psychology — and as a model of how a single, brave book can found a discipline. Read it alongside contemporary critique.

In brief

AI-generated summary

Freud presents dreams as 'the royal road to the unconscious,' arguing that they are disguised expressions of repressed desires, and offering a method for decoding their manifest content into latent meaning. He illustrates the method with hundreds of dreams, many his own.

What you'll leave with

Key takeaways

  • 1

    The mind has structure beneath conscious awareness, even if Freud's specific map is dated.

  • 2

    Symbols and substitutions are real features of mental life, not 'mere' coincidences.

  • 3

    Repression has costs — symptoms are often disguised arguments.

  • 4

    Reading great old theorists is a way to think with and against them.

Who should read this

The right reader

Readers interested in the history of ideas, depth psychology, or how disciplines are founded.

Themes

What it touches

DreamsUnconsciousDesireSymbolism
Emotional tone

How it reads

Inventive, idiosyncratic, foundational.

Reading difficulty: Advanced