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                100   Chapter 5 Psychoanalysis

                         moment and he thought: How the old woman is snoring; let’s see if anything’s
                         the matter with her. So he came into the room, and when he got to the bed he
                         saw the wolf lying there: ‘So I’ve found you here, you old sinner,’ he said, ‘I’ve
                         been looking for you for a long time.’ He was just about to take aim with his gun
                         when it occurred to him that the wolf might have swallowed the old woman and
                         she might still be saved – so instead of firing he took a pair of scissors and began
                         to cut open the sleeping wolf’s stomach. When he had made a snip or two, he saw
                         the bright red of the little girl’s cape, and after another few snips she jumped out
                         and cried: ‘Oh, how frightened I was, how dark it was inside the wolf!’ And then
                         her old grandmother came out too, still alive though she could hardly breathe.
                         But Little Redcape quickly fetched some big stones, and with them they filled the
                         wolf’s belly, and when he woke up he tried to run away; but the stones were so
                         heavy that he collapsed at once and was killed by the fall.
                           At this all three of them were happy; the huntsman skinned the wolf and took
                         his  skin  home,  the  grandmother  ate  the  cake  and  drank  the  wine  that  Little
                         Redcape had brought, and they made her feel much better. But Little Redcape said
                         to herself: As long as I live I’ll never again leave the path and run into the forest
                         by myself, when my mother has said I mustn’t.


                         The above is a fairy story collected by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm in the early nine-
                      teenth century. A psychoanalytic approach to this story would analyse it as a substitute
                      dream  (looking  for  the  processes  of  the  dream-work)  in  which  the  drama  of  the
                      Oedipus  complex  is  staged.  Little  Redcape  is  the  daughter  who  desires  the  father
                      (played in the first instance by the wolf). To remove the mother (condensed into the
                      composite figure of mother and grandmother), Little Redcape directs the wolf to her
                      grandmother’s house. In a story that is extremely elliptical, it is significant that her
                      description of where her grandmother lives is the only real moment of detail in the
                      whole story. Answering the wolf’s question, she says, ‘A good quarter of an hour’s walk
                      further on in the forest, under the three big oak trees, that’s where her house is; there
                      are hazel hedges by it, I’m sure you know the place.’ The wolf eats the grandmother (a
                      displacement for sexual intercourse) and then eats Little Redcape. The story ends with
                      the huntsman (the post-Oedipal father) delivering the (grand)mother and daughter to
                      a post-Oedipal world, in which ‘normal’ family relations have been restored. The wolf
                      is dead and Little Redcape promises never again to ‘leave the path and run into the for-
                      est by myself, when mother has said I mustn’t’. The final clause hints at Freud’s point
                      about a resentful identification. In addition to these examples of condensation and dis-
                      placement, the story contains many instances of symbolization. Examples include the
                      flowers, the forest, the path, the red velvet cape, the bottle of wine beneath her apron
                      (if she leaves the path she may ‘fall and break the bottle’) – all of these add a definite
                      symbolic charge to the narrative.
                         What Freud said about the interpretation of dreams should be borne in mind when
                      we consider the activities of readers. As you will recall, he warned about ‘the impos-
                      sibility of interpreting a dream unless one has the dreamer’s associations to it at one’s
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