Sigmund Freud's essay "The Uncanny" ("Das Unheimliche", 1919) is not just a literary-psychanalytic etude but a fundamental work on aesthetics and the psychology of fear, where the Christmas tale by E.T.A. Hoffmann "The Sandman" becomes a key clinical and cultural example. Freud uses this novella to illustrate his thesis that the "uncanny" is not something fundamentally new or alien, but the return of something long familiar, repressed into the unconscious, often associated with trauma. In this context, Christmas serves not as a celebration but as a chronological marker fixing the moment of a psychological catastrophe.
Freud begins with a linguistic analysis of the German word unheimlich (uncanny, eerie). He shows that its antonym heimlich means not only "domestic, cozy" but also "hidden, secret". Thus, unheimlich is not just "not-domestic" but something that should have remained hidden but has emerged. This semantic field leads to the psychoanalytic core: the uncanny is that which was once heimlich, familiar, part of the "home" of the psyche (e.g., childhood fears, complexes), but has been repressed and now returns in a distorted, alien form, causing anxiety.
Freud analyzes Hoffmann's novella in detail, highlighting the structurally forming elements of neurosis.
Christmas as the scene of the initial trauma: The culmination of little Nathan's childhood fears occurs precisely on Christmas Eve. He, expecting gifts, spies on his father and the eerie lawyer Koppelyus (a prototype of the Sandman — a mythical creature throwing sand in children's eyes to make them fall asleep). The boy witnesses a terrifying alchemical experiment associated with violence against the eyes. The gift-giving festival turns into a scene of anxiety and horror in front of the father figure, split into a good father and the evil Koppelyus.
The threat of the Sandman "pulling out the eyes" becomes the core of the phobia. In this way, the Christmas gift is forever associated with the threat of loss, not with receiving.
Obsessive repetition and splitting of the father image: The trauma received on the night of Christmas defines Nathan's entire life. In adulthood, he meets two characters in which the traits of Koppelyus are projected: the optician Giuseppe Coppolo and Professor Spalanzani. This obsessive repetition is a classic neurotic mechanism, where the psyche unconsciously reproduces the traumatic situation, trying to "replay" it.
The doll Olympia as "uncanny" animation of the inanimate: Nathan's fascination with the automaton Olympia is a central episode for Freud. The uncanny arises from the uncertainty between the living and the inanimate. Olympia seems alive but is a mechanism. This uncertainty touches a deep infantile conflict: children often animate dolls but also experience fear of them. The animated doll is the return of animistic beliefs from childhood, which the civilized adult has long discarded.
Freud, analyzing Hoffmann, actually constructs an etiological model of obsessional neurosis:
Traumatic event: The scene on Christmas Eve.
Repression: Childhood fears and affects are pushed into the unconscious.
Return of the repressed in an "uncanny" form: In adult life through phobias (fear of the Sandman/opticians), obsessional actions and objects (doll Olympia).
Symbolic association. The celebration becomes a conditioned reflex, a trigger, initiating anxiety.
Thus, Freud shows how a single, but intense experience, tied to a calendar holiday, can become an organizing principle of the entire psychological life, deforming reality through the lens of childhood terror.
Although Freud's interpretation has become canonical, modern researchers see broader meanings in "The Sandman" and beyond:
Critique of scientific rationalism: Hoffmann, and with him Freud, question the boundary between the living and the mechanical, which is particularly relevant in the era of the industrial revolution and emerging artificial intelligence. The fear of the automaton is also the fear of losing one's human essence.
Trauma as a violation of privacy and trust: Nathan becomes a witness to the secret, "adult," and violent world of his father. The family idyll of Christmas is destroyed by the intrusion of the real father-demiurge, committing violence. This is a trauma of revelation and the loss of a safe childhood world.
The "uncanny" in the digital age: Freud's concept has become incredibly relevant for analyzing modern culture. The phenomenon of the "uncanny valley" in robotics and CGI is a direct continuation of the idea of fear of the almost living but not quite human. Social networks full of "revived" images of the past and deepfake are a fertile ground for a new type of unheimliche.
Interesting fact: Freud himself, according to testimonies, experienced intense anxiety on the eve of Christmas, which some biographers link to his complex relationship with his father and possibly his own unconscious associations, which he so brilliantly described.
Freud's work takes the analysis of holidays beyond sociology and cultural studies into the field of clinical psychology of individual experience. It shows that:
Holidays, especially such emotionally charged ones as Christmas, are powerful magnets for projections of childhood conflicts.
Nostalgia and anxiety often accompanying holidays may not just be "atmosphere" but an active return of the repressed.
Trauma tied to a calendar date acquires special persistence because the cultural context (decorations, rituals, expectations) annually reactivates neural networks associated with the original experience.
Freud's essay "The Uncanny" transforms Hoffmann's Christmas tale into a universal paradigm for understanding psychological trauma. It demonstrates how a celebration intended to be the most heimlich (domestic, cozy) can become a catalyst for the most unheimlich (uncanny) experience — the encounter with one's own repressed childhood terror.
Freud's analysis teaches that neurosis often has not an abstract but a calendar-mythological architecture. Trauma, like a holiday, repeats, compulsively returning in the form of symptoms. "The Sandman" becomes, thus, not just a scary fairy tale but an allegory of the work of the unconscious, where the Christmas tree casts not only cozy light but also long, distorted shadows of repressed memories. In this sense, every holiday is a potential encounter with one's own "Sandman," with that which we once hid in the farthest corner of the psyche, but which continues to live its autonomous, terrifying life, ready to emerge in a moment when we most expect peace and joy.
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