Editing Psychogenic fugue

From Lost Highway

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be recorded in this page's edit history.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Current revision Your text
Line 35: Line 35:
More information is needed to reconcile these quotes from Lynch and Gifford.  The script was completed in June, 1995, and filming began in Sep., 1995.  It may be the case that Lynch and Gifford learned of psychogenic fugue during production, after writing the script, and that Gifford researched the phenomenon at this point, while Lynch did not.  However, the differences between the script and the film are minor, and it remains unclear that "psychogenic fugue" played any role in the production of ''Lost Highway'', though it may have influenced Gifford's thinking about the film.
More information is needed to reconcile these quotes from Lynch and Gifford.  The script was completed in June, 1995, and filming began in Sep., 1995.  It may be the case that Lynch and Gifford learned of psychogenic fugue during production, after writing the script, and that Gifford researched the phenomenon at this point, while Lynch did not.  However, the differences between the script and the film are minor, and it remains unclear that "psychogenic fugue" played any role in the production of ''Lost Highway'', though it may have influenced Gifford's thinking about the film.
-
==== Parallels to ''Lost Highway'': psychogenic fugue ====
+
Awesome article.Much thanks again.
-
 
+
-
''Lost Highway'' employs psychogenic fugue in the psychological sense, but only in a loose sense.
+
-
 
+
-
Strictly speaking, what happens to Fred Madison cannot be described as a case of psychogenic fugue.  That is, if Fred is interpreted as being locked in a jail cell while imagining or believing that he is Pete Dayton working at Arnie’s garage, etc., then Fred's condition does not correspond to the [[Psychogenic fugue#Definition|diagnostic definitions]] of psychogenic fugue, which do not involve a loss of perceptual contact with one's surroundings or the psychological hallucination of alternative surroundings.  If Fred's experience is interpreted in the above manner, his condition does not correspond to dissociative fugue or any other clinically recognized [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociative_disorder dissociative disorder].  This, however, does not rule out interpreting Fred's transformation into Pete as a psychological or fantasy experience.
+
-
 
+
-
In a loose sense, the narrative of ''Lost Highway'' is similar to cases of psychogenic fugue in several respects.  Similar to psychogenic fugue, the transition from the world of Fred and Renee to the world of Pete and Alice is triggered by traumatic, stressful events that Fred wish to deny; it is manifested as a form of wish fulfillment; and it is accompanied by the amnesic forgetting of the past and the assumption of a new identity.  Also similar to psychogenic fugue, the identities of Fred and Renee return when elements of the forgotten past resurface and when the new identities are revealed as false.
+
==== Parallels to ''Lost Highway'': musical fugue ====  
==== Parallels to ''Lost Highway'': musical fugue ====  

Please note that all contributions to Lost Highway may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you don't want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then don't submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see Project:Copyrights for details). DO NOT SUBMIT COPYRIGHTED WORK WITHOUT PERMISSION!


Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)
Personal tools