Parricide
see also: Etymology of Parricide
The parricidal , term resulting from Latin parricidia (assassin of a close relation) indicates:
-
the act to assassinate his/her father, his mother, to see any close relation.
- the act to assassinate a person established in a relation comparable with that of a father (for example, the leader of a country)
- the author of this act.
In philosophy, the parricide is the act (symbolic system) founder of the Athenian school. " It is necessary to kill Parménide ".
Literature
In Dostoïevski and the parricide , a test of 1928, Freud introduces the parricide like central subject of three literary chief-works:
- Hamlet of Shakespeare
- The Brothers Karamazov of Dostoïevski
See too
External bonds
- Literature and parricide, text in connection with the test of Freud.
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