dc.description.abstract | The concepts of dreams and unconsciousness originate from the psychoanalysis. The study focuses on artistry, analyzing intimist task and expression of dreams by censorship and disguise skill, rather than the mental illness concept of Freud and the inadequacy methodology, and discover the aesthetic effects constructing by the poems and dreams by analyzing the interaction of external language environment and unconscious within the theme. Research methodology, the study adopts the mental mechanism and censorship of dreams from the ”The Interpretation of Dreams” from Freud to explore the intimist task of dreams as the prelude, while Freud’s dream work, Jung’s “visionary” artistic type, Lacan’s signifier/signified concept, and the semiotic and the symbolic of Kristeva, along with related psychoanalysis concepts, are adopted as the basis of the study. In chapter 2 and chapter 3, analyze various literal types of dreams and shed light on aesthetic effects. In chapter 4, poems with politic language are the main discussion for the theme writing of dreams, to find out the disguise skills of poets to avoid censorship from the authority, moreover, poets’ relationship between external environment and internal thoughts are also analyzed in the study, while the range of pieces are taken from the Japanese-colonial age to the martial law age. In chapter 5, female’s dream poetry, the materials are obtained from the personal experiences and feeling on the life to create trippy unconscious contents to present desires and self-consicousness by imaginary strategy. At last, intimist contents of dreams are concluded, and realize the variety of literal presentation of dreams in different writing situation. Essentially, modern poetry reaches intimist tasks - “Breaking the censor under the symbolized order to present the needs of the mind.” by the “flexibility”, “freedom”, ”liquidity”, “fracture”, and “resistance” within the language of dream and unconscious. Nevertheless, the standard of “more censorship, more disguise” also points out the literal forms of dreams should possess exquisite aesthetic effects. | en_US |