Examples Of Psychological Resistance In A. S Byatt's Possession

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Psychological Resistance In more detail, A.S Byatt’s Possession is redolent of certain aspects of Freudian psychology, more specifically, repression. In this novel the reader becomes aware of the undertakings of the main character Roland Mitchell not only because of growing up in a society filled with a “ pretty blank day” but because of growing up in the hands of a drunken mother. A.S Byatt writes that “[H]e thought himself as a latecomer” and adds: He (Roland) had arrived too late for things that were still in the air but vanished, the whole ferment and brightness and journeying’s and youth of the 1960s, the blissful dawn of what he and his contemporaries saw a pretty blank day. Through psychedelic years he was a school boy in a depressed Lancashire cotton town. His father was a minor official in the Country Council. Upsetting experiences often comprise a threat to life or safety, but any situation that leaves one feeling overwhelmed and alone can be upsetting, even if it doesn’t involve physical harm. From …show more content…

Sublimation is the transformation of unwanted impulses into something that is harmless. More convincingly, sublimation happens when people convert their opposed feelings into a more creative form. For example, a person facing extreme anger might become a writer or a researcher as a means of liberating prevention. This can simply be a diverting release or may be a creative and valuable piece of work. When one is faced with the conflict of painful thoughts, he/she creates psychic energy. This has to go somewhere. Sublimation channels this energy away from destructive acts and diverts it into something that is socially acceptable and/or creatively effective. Sublimation is the basic mechanisms that allows one to act out unacceptable impulses by converting these behaviors into a more acceptable