“The Red Haired Woman” and “Trans-Atlantic” within the Father, Son, and Authority Triangle

The father and son relationship is the most important, and probably the most difficult one. Generally, fathers want to realize their desires which they were not able to through their sons, and in one sense see them as their special projects. However, when they come to a certain age, the sons mostly...

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Main Author: Neşe Munise YÜCE
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Ankara University 2018-12-01
Series:Ankara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Dergisi
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dtcfdergisi.ankara.edu.tr/index.php/dtcf/article/view/5495
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spelling doaj-e119e4b3db0a4add928d4281c00409db2020-11-24T21:59:19ZdeuAnkara UniversityAnkara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Dergisi2459-01502018-12-015821267127710.33171/dtcfjournal.2018.58.2.54444“The Red Haired Woman” and “Trans-Atlantic” within the Father, Son, and Authority TriangleNeşe Munise YÜCE0Ankara Üniversitesi. netayu@gmail.comThe father and son relationship is the most important, and probably the most difficult one. Generally, fathers want to realize their desires which they were not able to through their sons, and in one sense see them as their special projects. However, when they come to a certain age, the sons mostly choose a way of living in which they can realize their own dreams by resisting their father's desires. As a result of this, conflicts, inevitably, arise between them. S. Freud shows “Oedipus complex” as the only reason for the conflicts. S. Freud, mentions them in his book entitled “Totem and Taboo”, and asserts that these conflicts develop through subconscious drives. It is obvious that the oedipal conflict between the father and son, which has been ongoing since the beginning of the mankind, is one of the most dominant patterns in literature. This interdisciplinary study addresses the “killing father and son” archetype that is found in two Turkish and Polish worldfamous writers' novels (“The Red Haired Woman” by Orhan Pamuk and “Trans-Atlantic” by Witold Gombrowicz). In this study, “the desire to kill” is discussed through Erich Fromm's approach to Oedipus complex, that is to say, regarding the conflict as a symbol of revolt of the son against his father's authority in a patriarchal society. With the aim of comparing the organizational structure that rests on male authority in Polish and Turkish societies, in this study the similarities in this sense, will be shown and verified in the scale of these two novels which constitute a challenge against the societies which do not dignify their sons.http://dtcfdergisi.ankara.edu.tr/index.php/dtcf/article/view/5495Ataerkil ToplumÖdipus KompleksiBaba CinayetiOğul CinayetiArketip
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neşe Munise YÜCE
spellingShingle Neşe Munise YÜCE
“The Red Haired Woman” and “Trans-Atlantic” within the Father, Son, and Authority Triangle
Ankara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Dergisi
Ataerkil Toplum
Ödipus Kompleksi
Baba Cinayeti
Oğul Cinayeti
Arketip
author_facet Neşe Munise YÜCE
author_sort Neşe Munise YÜCE
title “The Red Haired Woman” and “Trans-Atlantic” within the Father, Son, and Authority Triangle
title_short “The Red Haired Woman” and “Trans-Atlantic” within the Father, Son, and Authority Triangle
title_full “The Red Haired Woman” and “Trans-Atlantic” within the Father, Son, and Authority Triangle
title_fullStr “The Red Haired Woman” and “Trans-Atlantic” within the Father, Son, and Authority Triangle
title_full_unstemmed “The Red Haired Woman” and “Trans-Atlantic” within the Father, Son, and Authority Triangle
title_sort “the red haired woman” and “trans-atlantic” within the father, son, and authority triangle
publisher Ankara University
series Ankara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Dergisi
issn 2459-0150
publishDate 2018-12-01
description The father and son relationship is the most important, and probably the most difficult one. Generally, fathers want to realize their desires which they were not able to through their sons, and in one sense see them as their special projects. However, when they come to a certain age, the sons mostly choose a way of living in which they can realize their own dreams by resisting their father's desires. As a result of this, conflicts, inevitably, arise between them. S. Freud shows “Oedipus complex” as the only reason for the conflicts. S. Freud, mentions them in his book entitled “Totem and Taboo”, and asserts that these conflicts develop through subconscious drives. It is obvious that the oedipal conflict between the father and son, which has been ongoing since the beginning of the mankind, is one of the most dominant patterns in literature. This interdisciplinary study addresses the “killing father and son” archetype that is found in two Turkish and Polish worldfamous writers' novels (“The Red Haired Woman” by Orhan Pamuk and “Trans-Atlantic” by Witold Gombrowicz). In this study, “the desire to kill” is discussed through Erich Fromm's approach to Oedipus complex, that is to say, regarding the conflict as a symbol of revolt of the son against his father's authority in a patriarchal society. With the aim of comparing the organizational structure that rests on male authority in Polish and Turkish societies, in this study the similarities in this sense, will be shown and verified in the scale of these two novels which constitute a challenge against the societies which do not dignify their sons.
topic Ataerkil Toplum
Ödipus Kompleksi
Baba Cinayeti
Oğul Cinayeti
Arketip
url http://dtcfdergisi.ankara.edu.tr/index.php/dtcf/article/view/5495
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