Freud's imaginative work: Moses and monotheism and the non-European other

This essay tracks and maps out the ideas that informed the writing of Sigmund Freud's final opus, the highly speculative and putatively historical text Moses and Monotheism. Contrary to interpretations of Moses and Monotheism as a work that critiques Jewishness as it outlines Freud's theor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: De Chavez, Jeremy
Format: text
Published: Animo Repository 2016
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/114
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Institution: De La Salle University
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Summary:This essay tracks and maps out the ideas that informed the writing of Sigmund Freud's final opus, the highly speculative and putatively historical text Moses and Monotheism. Contrary to interpretations of Moses and Monotheism as a work that critiques Jewishness as it outlines Freud's theories on culture and religion, this essay suggests that Freud, in fact, attempts to defend Judaism by isolating what he believes is its quality that attracts hate-its monotheism-and by then ascribing that quality to the non-European other. In Freud's work the non-European other is an exploitable resource that Freud uses to support and corroborate his theories with little concern at arriving at a genuine understanding of those cultures. Freud's imaginative reconfiguration of the non-European other for his own purposes, what this essay refers to as his imaginative work, animates much of his writings on culture and as this essay suggests, results from Freud's uneasy understanding of his own Jewish origins. © AesthetixMS 2016.