3691
One of the most uncanny and wide-spread forms of superstition is the dread
of the evil eye, which has been exhaustively studied by the Hamburg oculist
Seligmann (1910-11). There never seems to have been any doubt about the source of
this dread. Whoever possesses something that is at once valuable and fragile is
afraid of other people’s envy, in so far as he projects on to them the envy he
would have felt in their place. A feeling like this betrays itself by a look
even though it is not put into words; and when a man is prominent owing to
noticeable, and particularly owing to unattractive, attributes, other people are
ready to believe that his envy is rising to a more than usual degree of intensity
and that this intensity will convert it into effective action. What is feared
is thus a secret intention of doing harm, and certain signs are taken to mean
that that intention has the necessary power at its command.
These last examples of the uncanny are to be referred to the principle
which I have called ‘omnipotence of thoughts’, taking the name from an expression
used by one of my patients. And now we find ourselves on familiar ground. Our
analysis of instances of the uncanny has led us back to the old, animistic
conception of the universe. This was characterized by the idea that the world was
peopled with the spirits of human beings; by the subject’s narcissistic
overvaluation of his own mental processes; by the belief in the omnipotence of thoughts
and the technique of magic based on that belief; by the attribution to various
outside persons and things of carefully graded magical powers, or ‘mana’; as well as by all the other creations with the help of which man, in the
unrestricted narcissism of that stage of development, strove to fend off the
manifest prohibitions of reality. It seems as if each one of us has been through a
phase of individual development corresponding to this animistic stage in
primitive men, that none of us has passed through it without preserving certain
residues and traces of it which are still capable of manifesting themselves, and
that everything which now strikes us as ‘uncanny’ fulfils the condition of
touching those residues of animistic mental activity within us and bringing them to
expression.¹
At this point I will put forward two considerations which, I think, contain
the gist of this short study. In the first place, if psycho-analytic theory is
correct in maintaining that every affect belonging to an emotional impulse,
whatever its kind, is transformed, if it is repressed, into anxiety, then among
instances of frightening things there must be one class in which the frightening
element can be shown to be something repressed which recurs. This class of frightening things would then constitute the uncanny; and it
must be a matter of indifference whether what is uncanny was itself originally
frightening or whether it carried some other affect. In the second place, if this is indeed the secret nature of the
uncanny, we can understand why linguistic usage has extended das Heimliche into its opposite, das Unheimliche (p. 3680); for this uncanny is in reality nothing new or alien, but something which is
familiar and old-established in the mind and which has become alienated from
it only through the process of repression. This reference to the factor of
repression enables us, furthermore, to understand Schelling’s definition of the
uncanny as something which ought to have remained hidden but has come to light.
¹ Cf. my book Totem and Taboo (1912-13), Essay III, ‘Animism, Magic and the Omnipotence of Thoughts’, where
the following footnote will be found: ‘We appear to attribute an "uncanny"
quality to impressions that seek to confirm the omnipotence of thoughts and the
animistic mode of thinking in general, after we have reached a stage at which, in
our judgement, we have abandoned such beliefs.’