Tomorrow is Sigmund Freud's birthday... his 155th. Rather than being clich
é and focusing tomorrow's theme on Freud (when, in fact, our modern world is probably
over-saturated with his influence), I thought it might be interesting to consider Freud's birthplace... Moravia, Austria.
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| Moravian herald since 1292, chequered eagle |
Freud was born in Freidberg, Moravia. Now part of the
Czech Republic, Freidberg (and Moravia) were once part of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire. In fact, it was not until Freud was 62 that
Moravia became a part of Czechoslovakia and finally, in 1993, as part of
the Czech Republic.
Like many Eastern European regions, this swatch of land has been well
traversed. The Celts ceded the region to Germanic tribes early in the
1st century B.C. Slavic peoples came into the region 600 years or so
later and the land passed back and forth between Slavic and Germanic
principalities, kingdoms, influences, and invaders. Great Moravia was
established by the Slavs in 9th century. This empire covered the
following large part of Europe.
Apparently, though we call these people Slavs, there is no consistency
between their culture, language, or politics and modern Slavic nations.
During the years 883-894 A.D., Moravia annexed Bohemia, with Bohemia
finally pulling away to successfully establish its independence in 895.
It is an odd fact to think that the so-very Austrian Freud was perhaps
actually Czech, anciently Slav, and even more anciently Celtic.
Further, perhaps this closeness of Moravia with Bohemia is more
significant than mere proximity. Freidberg is considered part of
southern Bohemian region of the current Czech Republic.
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| Saint Bartholomew Church, in market town of Frymburk (Freidberg) |
And while Bohemia may be a region, it is perhaps better
known as the unconventional lifestyle that artists (or Williamsburg
residents) lead, or the type of clothing that celebrates free love, a
wandering spirit, adventure, and the "appearance" of voluntary poverty.
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| Nicole Ritchie in
her own ad campaign for House of Harlow, a boho chic line selling at
shopbop.com... current Boho style does NOT come cheap... |
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The term evolved when Romani people (a.k.a. gypsies)
arrived in France and lived as outsiders. They were called Bohemians as
it was assumed that they had come from the aforementioned region. It was
rather a pejorative term at first, despite our modern usage, and the
life of a genuine Bohemian was most likely quite difficult and often
unpleasant.
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| William Bouguereau, The Bohemian, 1890 |
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| The modern romanticized and coddled version |
It was through art that the Bohemian and his alternate
lifestyle were ultimately romanticized and reimagined -- through
Puccini's
La Boheme, Henri Murger's short story collection
Scenes of Bohemian Life,
and ultimately even Broadway musicals such as "Rent" (with its famous
number, "La vie Boheme.") And nowadays, the phrase has made a complete
180 from its origins so that there are "Bobos" (David Brook's term for
bourgeouis bohemians). To be bohemian is cool, counter- and sub-culture,
avant-garde, post-Beat, hipster, post-modern, zen, and epitomized in
events like Burning Man.
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| We came, we saw, we burned the man. |
So, how can we circle around back to Freud? It's his
birthday for gosh sakes!! Well, Freud himself was a sort of bohemian...
in the outcast sense. Like any innovative agitator, his theories were
not comfortably incorporated into Viennese and Austrian (and worldwide)
society... at first... until they were. Freud now exists as so much a
part of our very own subconscious, the subconscious of which he made us
so aware in the first place. He sits as a ''founding father" to our
modern way of thinking and being -- along with other luminaries such as
Einstein, Marx, and Darwin. I often talk to my students, when we read
Romeo and Juliet,
about how Mercutio was a proto-Freudian... believing that dreams
reflected inner anxieties and instincts and dark desires rather than
falling in line with the rest of his era in believing that they
possessed predictive abilities.
"This is that very Mab
That plats the manes of horses in the night
And bakes the elflocks in foul sluttish hairs,
Which once untangled much misfortune bodes.
This is the hag, when maids lie on their backs,
That presses them and learns them first to bear,
Making them women of good carriage.
This is she!" (Shakespeare,
Romeo and Juliet, Act 1, scene i)
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| Freud's concept of the unconscious |
Freud's view of truth and reality so dominates and
infiltrates our way of thinking and being that it is perhaps difficult
to disentangle ourselves enough to recognize the influence. Dr. John
Cash (I know! the
other man in black...) of the University of
Melbourne in Australia speaks of how Freud devised of an internal
division within each of us, a split between desire and authority. Not
only did Freud develop theories of the mind, theories of repressed
conflicts, theories of how we dream and how we act, but he "explored how
groups, institutions and cultures mark themselves upon the psyche and
how, as human subjects, we relate to such social demands. Freud
developed the complex account we have of both human subjectivity and
human connectedness -- of our being a self with others; and the internal
division and discontent that such a cultural achievement, such a
self-civilizing project involves." (Dr. Cash, 2009)
You see! Freud does insidiously infiltrate the modern world and our
modern selves and minds! I had intended for this entire blog entry to
delve into the interesting and unusual history of Moravia and where do I
end up? Back with Freud... myself always internally divided, always
subconsciously motivated... just like the rest of you.
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