Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University
Bhavnagar
Paper Code: 22417
Dissertation Title:
Madness, Power and the Fragmented Self: A Psychoanalytic Reading in King Lear and Macbeth
Submitted by
Divya Paledhara
Supervised by
Prof. (Dr.) Dilip Barad
Roll No :5 (Sem 4)
SID Number / PG Registration Number: 5108240026
Seat Number: 15240005
ABC ID: 260416425316
Year: March-April 2023
Submitted to: Department of English, Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University
Index:
Chapter: 1 Introduction 9
1.1 Rationale of the Research : 10
1.2 Theoretical Background: 11
1.3 Introduction of the Texts: 13
1.3.1 King Lear 13
1.3.2 Macbeth 14
1.3.3 Comparative Context of the Two Tragedies 15
1.4 Statement of the Research Problem 15
1.5 Hypothesis of the Study: 17
1.6 Research Questions : 17
1.7 Research Objectives: 17
1.8 Research Methods: 18
1.8.1 Close Textual Analysis (Close Reading) 18
1.8.2 Comparative Literary Analysis 19
1.8.3 Psychoanalytic Critical Approach 19
1.8.4 Thematic Analysis 20
1.8.5 Interpretive Literary Analysis 20
1.9 Structure of the Dissertation 21
Chapter 1: Introduction 22
Chapter 2: Literature Review 22
Chapter 3: From Kingship to Madness: The Psychoanalytic Tragedy of Self in King Lear 22
Chapter 4: Ambition, Guilt, and the Fragmented Self: A Psychoanalytic Reading of Power in Macbeth 23
Chapter 5: Conclusion 23
1.10 Conclusion: 23
References: 25
Chapter : 2 Literature Review 27
Psychoanalytic reading in Freud and Lacan's book 28
Fragmented self and desire -through lens of Kleinian and Freudian 29
Fractured Self Dynamics 29
Research Gap : 39
References : 40
Chapter : 3 43
From Kingship to Madness: The Psychoanalytic Tragedy of Self in King Lear 43
Introduction: 44
3.1 Theoretical Framework: Psychoanalysis and the Concept of the Self 45
3.1.1 Freudian Psychoanalysis: Ego, Id, and Authority 45
3.1.2 Repression, Guilt, and the Unconscious 46
3.1.3 Lacanian Theory: Mirror Stage and Fragmented Identity 46
3.1.4 The Symbolic Order and the Collapse of Law 47
3.2 Overview of King Lear: Power, Family, and Tragedy 47
3.2.1 Division of the Kingdom and the Love Test 48
3.2.2 Familial Betrayal and the Escalation of Conflict 49
3.2.3 Themes of Madness and Tragic Realization 50
3.3 Kingship and Identity: Lear’s Narcissistic Self 52
3.3.1 Narcissism and the Love Test 52
3.3.2 Public Authority and the Fragility of Self 53
3.3.3 Intersection of Pride, Vulnerability, and Narcissism 53
3.4 Abdication and Ego Disintegration 54
3.4.1 Abdication as Psychological Rupture 54
3.4.2 Transfer of Power and Ego Instability 55
3.4.3 Defense Mechanisms: Rage, Denial, and Projection 55
3.4.4 Symbolic and Emotional Implications of Abdication 55
3.5 Familial Betrayal and the Return of the Repressed 56
3.5.1 Goneril and Regan as Agents of Rejection 56
3.5.2 Cordelia and the Repressed Truth of Love 56
3.5.3 Father–Daughter Conflict and Psychic Trauma………………….………………….….57
3.5.4 Repression, Madness, and the Revelation of Self 57
3.6 Madness as Psychic Fragmentation 57
3.6.1 Stages of Madness: Rage, Confusion, and Delusion 58
3.6.2 Storm Scene as Projection of Inner Chaos 58
3.6.3 Madness and the Exposure of Fear 58
3.6.4 Madness as Mirror of the Fragmented Self 59
3.7 Madness as Insight and Self-Recognition 59
3.7.1 Empathy and Recognition of Human Vulnerability 59
3.7.2 Madness as a Pathway to Self-Reflection 60
3.7.3 Reconciliation and Tragic Awareness 60
3.7.4 Madness as a Mirror for Universal Human Experience 60
3.8 The Body, Aging, and Fear of Futurity in King Lear 60
3.8.1 Aging and Physical Decay 61
3.8.2 Loss of Masculinity and Authority 62
3.8.3 Fear of Mortality and Futurity 62
3.9 Lear’s Death and the Limits of Psychoanalytic Redemption 63
3.9.1 Reconciliation with Cordelia: Partial Psychic Healing 63
3.9.2 Cordelia’s Death and the Collapse of Redemptive Possibility 64
3.9.3 Death as Emotional Release, Not Psychological Resolution 64
3.9.4 Tragedy and the Limits of Self-Knowledge 64
Conclusion: 65
References: 66
Chapter : 4 69
Ambition, Guilt and the Fragmented Self: A Psychoanalytic Reading of Power in Macbeth 69
Introduction : 70
4.1 Theoretical Foundations: Desire, Guilt, and the Disintegration of the Self in Macbeth 70
4.1.1 Freudian Conflict: Id, Ego, and the Return of the Repressed 71
4.1.2 Lacanian Desire and the Structure of Lack 71
4.1.3 Kleinian Anxiety: Splitting, Paranoia, and Guilt 72
4.1.4 Sovereignty, Identity, and the Fear of Futurity 72
4.2 Overview of the Text: Structure and Tragic Design 73
4.2.1 Exposition: Prophecy and the Awakening of Desire 73
4.2.2 Rising Action: Moral Hesitation and Regicide 74
4.2.3 Climax: Tyranny and Paranoia 74
4.2.4 Falling Action: Isolation and Existential Void 75
4.2.5 Catastrophe: Collapse of Sovereignty and the Self 76
4.3 Moral Transgression and the Progressive Fragmentation of the Self in Macbeth 76
4.3.1 Ambition and the Initial Rupture of Ethical Identity 77
4.3.2 Guilt, Insomnia, and the Failure of Repression 77
4.3.3 Paranoia, Projection, and Kleinian Splitting 77
4.3.4 Fear of Futurity and Existential Destabilization 78
4.3.5 Sovereignty and the Ontological Collapse of the Subject 78
4.4 Lacanian Desire and the Illusion of Sovereignty in Macbeth 80
4.4.1 Desire as Lack and the Construction of the Imaginary Self 80
4.4.2 Symbolic Authority and the Failure of Ethical Mediation 81
4.4.2.1 Violation of the Symbolic Order: 81
4.4.2.2 Identity Destabilization: 81
4.4.2.3 Collapse of Ethical Mediation: 82
4.4.2.4 Illegitimate Sovereignty and Language Crisis: 82
4.4.2.5 Sovereignty Without Integration: 82
4.4.3 The Mirror of Power and Misrecognition 82
4.4.4 The Real: Trauma, Anxiety, and the Limits of Meaning 83
4.4.5 Sovereignty as an Impossible Fulfillment of Desire 83
4.5 Kleinian Anxiety and Paranoid Sovereignty in Macbeth ………………..83
4.5.1 Paranoid-Schizoid Position and Persecutory Anxiety ..........................................................84
4.5.2 Splitting of Good and Bad Objects.........................................................................................84
4.5.3 Projection and Repetitive Violence as Defense......................................................................85
4.5.4 Movement Toward Depressive Anxiety and Psychic Exhaustion..........................................85
4.6 Ambition, Guilt, and Gendered Power: Lady Macbeth and the Politics of Psychic Disintegration 86
4.6.1 Ambition as Shared Psychic Motor 86
4.6.2 Gender, Authority, and the Reconfiguration of Identity 87
4.6.3 Guilt, Repression, and Somatic Expression 88
4.6.4 Paradox of Sovereignty: Power Without Psychic Integration 88
4.7 Psychological Manifestation of Hallucination and Inner Disintegration in Macbeth 89
4.7.1 Hallucination as the Sensory Form of Moral Conflict 89
4.7.2 Public Exposure of Private Psychological Breakdown 89
4.7.3 Disintegration of Language and Cognitive Structure 90
4.7.4 The Dramatic Stage as Representation of Interior Consciousness 90
4.8 Comparative Reflection: Macbeth and King Lear 90
4.8.1 Internal Ambition vs External Loss as Origins of Madness 91
4.8.2 Sovereignty and the Fragmented Self 91
4.8.3 Guilt, Recognition, and the Path to Self-Realization 92
Conclusion : 93
References : 94
Chapter : 5 Conclusion 97
Introduction: 98
5.1 Synthesis of Major Findings 98
5.2 Addressing the Research Questions 99
5.3 Evaluation of the Research Objectives 100
5.4 Revisiting the Hypothesis 102
5.5 Addressing the Research Gap 103
5.6 Theoretical and Methodological Limitations of the Comparative Psychoanalytic Study 104
1. Theoretical Limitation: Reliance on Psychoanalytic Frameworks 104
2. Textual Scope Limitation: Restricted Corpus of Shakespearean Tragedy 104
3. Methodological Limitation: Interpretive Nature of Literary Analysis 106
4. Conceptual Limitation: Emphasis on Psychological Over Social Context 106
Concluding Statement on Limitations 106
5.7 Implications and Future Research 107
Key Implications: 107
5.7.1 Directions for Future Research 108
5.7.2 Theoretical and Critical Contributions 108
5.7.3 Broader Literary and Interdisciplinary Significance 108
5.7.4 Concluding Synthesis of Implications 109
Bibliography: 111
Chapter : 5 Conclusion
Introduction:
This dissertation presents a comparative psychoanalytic analysis of King Lear and Macbeth to examine the relationship between madness, political authority, and identity fragmentation in Shakespearean tragedy. Using the theories of Freud, Lacan, and object-relations criticism, the study argues that madness functions as a psychological response to shifts in power that destabilize identity and intensify unconscious conflict. Authority operates not only as a political system but also as a psychological structure that regulates desire and recognition. When this structure collapses, the stability of the self is threatened.
The comparative analysis shows that both the loss of sovereignty in Lear and the illegitimate acquisition of power in Macbeth lead to psychological fragmentation. Lear’s madness develops through deprivation, vulnerability, and the collapse of recognition, while Macbeth’s instability arises from guilt and moral conflict caused by transgressive ambition. The study therefore demonstrates that identity in Shakespearean tragedy is symbolically and relationally constructed, and its disruption produces psychological disintegration and tragic realization.
5.1 Synthesis of Major Findings
This study examined the relationship between political authority, madness, and identity fragmentation through a comparative psychoanalytic analysis of King Lear and Macbeth. The findings reveal that Shakespeare portrays authority as a structure that stabilizes identity by providing recognition, legitimacy, and social order. When this structure collapses or becomes corrupted, the ego loses coherence and psychological instability emerges. Madness therefore functions as a response to disrupted symbolic authority rather than a simple emotional disturbance.
The research demonstrates that Lear’s psychological collapse results from the loss of sovereignty and social recognition, which exposes vulnerability and dismantles his established identity. In contrast, Macbeth’s instability arises from the illegitimate acquisition of power, generating guilt, repression, and persistent moral conflict. Despite these different trajectories, both characters experience similar processes of identity fragmentation caused by disrupted authority.
The study also establishes that identity in Shakespearean tragedy is relationally constructed within social and symbolic structures. When these structures fail, the self becomes divided by internal tensions, leading to hallucinations, emotional excess, and moral disintegration. The findings confirm that madness, power, and identity are structurally interconnected in Shakespeare’s tragedies. Ultimately, the research supports the hypothesis that transformations in authority activate unconscious conflict and destabilize subjectivity, revealing the psychological consequences of power and the fragility of human identity.
5.2 Addressing the Research Questions
1. How does Shakespeare represent madness as a psychological response to the loss or acquisition of political power in King Lear and Macbeth?
Shakespeare represents madness as a psychological response to transformations in political authority in King Lear and Macbeth. In King Lear, madness develops after the loss of sovereignty, where the collapse of symbolic power dismantles Lear’s identity and exposes vulnerability and loss of recognition. His emotional excess and disorientation reflect the psychological consequences of deprived authority. In contrast, Macbeth presents madness as the result of the illegitimate acquisition of power, where ambition conflicts with moral conscience and produces guilt, paranoia, and hallucinations. Thus, Shakespeare portrays madness as the internalization of political disruption, showing that both the loss and unlawful seizure of authority destabilize identity and generate psychological conflict.
2. In what ways do the protagonists experience fragmentation of the self following destabilization of their identity and authority?
The protagonists experience fragmentation of the self when their authority and identity become destabilized. In King Lear, fragmentation occurs after the loss of sovereignty and filial recognition, which dismantles the symbolic structure that once defined his identity. Lear’s psychological disorientation and emotional instability demonstrate the collapse of coherent selfhood. In Macbeth, fragmentation emerges through internal conflict between ambition and moral awareness. His identity becomes divided between the desire for power and the recognition of ethical transgression, producing anxiety and instability. Shakespeare therefore shows that identity is relationally formed and becomes fragmented when structures of authority and recognition collapse.
3. How does a psychoanalytic framework facilitate a deeper understanding of hallucinations, emotional excess, and moral disintegration in King Lear and Macbeth?
A psychoanalytic framework explains hallucinations, emotional excess, and moral disintegration as expressions of unconscious conflict activated by disrupted authority. In King Lear, emotional intensity and perceptual instability reflect the eruption of repressed anxieties after the collapse of symbolic authority. Lear’s suffering exposes fears of vulnerability, aging, and dependency. In Macbeth, hallucinations and paranoia represent manifestations of guilt and repressed moral anxiety caused by transgressive ambition. Psychoanalytic interpretation therefore clarifies that these symptoms are not merely dramatic devices but structured psychological responses to destabilized power and identity.
5.3 Evaluation of the Research Objectives
This section evaluates the extent to which the research objectives of the study have been achieved through the comparative psychoanalytic analysis of King Lear and Macbeth. The investigation has demonstrated that Shakespeare’s tragedies construct madness as a psychological phenomenon closely linked to transformations in political authority and identity. By applying Freudian, Lacanian, and object-relations perspectives, the study has examined how shifts in power destabilize the ego, intensify unconscious conflict, and produce the fragmentation of the self. The findings collectively confirm that the protagonists’ mental disintegration is not incidental but structurally connected to the dynamics of sovereignty, desire, repression, and moral anxiety. The following discussion outlines how each research objective has been fulfilled through the theoretical and textual analysis presented in this dissertation.
To analyze Shakespeare’s representation of madness as a psychological response to the loss or acquisition of political power.
The findings of this study confirm that madness in both tragedies emerges directly from transformations in political authority. Freud’s theory of ego instability under psychic pressure provides a framework for understanding how Lear’s loss of kingship dismantles the structure that sustains his identity, exposing unconscious fears of aging, dependency, and loss of control. His madness reflects the collapse of symbolic authority and the eruption of repressed anxieties. In contrast, Macbeth’s psychological disintegration follows the acquisition of power through regicide. His kingship, founded on violence and illegitimacy, generates overwhelming guilt and paranoia, illustrating Freud’s concept of repression and the return of suppressed moral conflict. Thus, Shakespeare represents madness as a psychological consequence of disrupted sovereignty, demonstrating that both the deprivation and the attainment of power can destabilize the human psyche.
To analyze the fragmentation of the self through a psychoanalytic reading of language, action, and hallucination.
The analysis establishes that both protagonists undergo a progressive fragmentation of identity that reflects Lacan’s theory of the divided subject. Lear’s dependence on recognition from his daughters illustrates the Lacanian notion that identity is constructed through symbolic relationships. When these relational mirrors collapse, his sense of self disintegrates, producing emotional excess, erratic speech, and perceptual distortion. Similarly, Macbeth’s hallucinations function as projections of unconscious conflict, demonstrating the breakdown of ego mediation between desire and moral law. From a Kleinian perspective, both characters exhibit processes of projection and splitting, externalizing inner conflict into perceived external threats. Through these psychoanalytic frameworks, the study demonstrates that Shakespeare portrays identity as inherently unstable, sustained by symbolic structures of authority and recognition that, once disrupted, produce psychic fragmentation.
To apply psychoanalytic theory comparatively to reveal how shifts in power intensify guilt, repression, and desire.
The comparative dimension of this research demonstrates that changes in political authority activate unconscious drives that shape the tragic trajectory of both protagonists. Lear’s abdication triggers the emergence of repressed emotional dependency and unresolved relational conflict, while Macbeth’s rise to power intensifies ambition and desire, followed by profound guilt and moral anxiety. Lacanian theory clarifies that the collapse or corruption of the symbolic order produces a crisis of subjectivity, while Freudian theory explains how repression and guilt generate psychological instability. By integrating these theoretical perspectives, the study reveals that Shakespearean tragedy presents madness as structurally embedded within power relations. The struggle for sovereignty becomes simultaneously a struggle within the psyche, where desire, repression, and moral conflict converge to produce the fragmentation of the self and the inevitability of tragic downfall.
In conclusion, the study confirms that all research objectives have been successfully achieved through the comparative psychoanalytic examination of King Lear and Macbeth. The analysis demonstrates that shifts in political authority function as a central force in destabilizing identity, activating unconscious conflict, and producing psychological disintegration in both protagonists. By integrating Freudian concepts of repression and guilt, Lacanian theories of symbolic identity and fragmentation, and object-relations perspectives on relational dependency, the research establishes that madness in these tragedies is structurally embedded within the dynamics of power. The findings therefore reinforce the central argument of the dissertation: Shakespeare presents the tragic collapse of the self as inseparable from transformations in sovereignty, revealing that the pursuit, loss, or corruption of power precipitates both psychic fragmentation and moral crisis. Through this theoretical and comparative framework, the study contributes to a deeper understanding of the psychological architecture of Shakespearean tragedy and the enduring relationship between authority, identity, and the human mind.
5.4 Revisiting the Hypothesis
This dissertation proposed that madness in King Lear and Macbeth emerges as a psychological consequence of disrupted power structures that produce fragmentation of the self through unconscious conflict. The comparative analysis confirms this hypothesis by demonstrating that transformations in sovereignty—either through the loss of power in King Lear or the illegitimate acquisition of power in Macbeth—destabilize the symbolic foundations that sustain identity and psychological stability. Authority functions not only as a political institution but also as a structure that organizes recognition, legitimacy, and personal identity.
The findings further show that when this symbolic order collapses or becomes corrupted, the ego’s ability to regulate desire and moral consciousness weakens. As a result, psychological instability appears through emotional excess, hallucination, anxiety, and moral disintegration. Lear’s loss of authority exposes vulnerability and dependency, while Macbeth’s unlawful rise to power generates guilt, repression, and persistent internal conflict. In both cases, disrupted sovereignty intensifies unconscious tensions that divide the self.
Overall, the study validates the hypothesis that shifts in power structures activate unconscious processes that destabilize identity and produce psychological fragmentation. Madness therefore functions as the subjective internalization of disrupted authority rather than an isolated condition. Shakespeare’s tragedies reveal the deep interconnection between political power and psychological stability, demonstrating that the crisis of sovereignty inevitably produces a crisis of identity.
5.5 Addressing the Research Gap
This dissertation addresses the research gap by providing an integrated comparative psychoanalytic analysis that connects madness, authority, and identity in King Lear and Macbeth. Earlier scholarship often examined political power and psychological instability separately, without fully explaining their structural relationship. The present study demonstrates that transformations in authority act as the central catalyst that activates unconscious conflict and destabilizes identity. By linking psychoanalytic theory with the dynamics of sovereignty, the research shows that madness emerges as a psychological response to disrupted symbolic legitimacy.
The study also advances a theoretical framework that interprets hallucination, emotional excess, and moral disintegration as manifestations of unconscious tensions produced by unstable authority. Authority functions as a psychological structure that regulates desire, moral control, and social recognition. When this structure collapses or becomes illegitimate, the individual confronts unresolved anxieties that cannot be symbolically contained, leading to fragmentation of the self and progressive psychological instability.
Another important contribution of the dissertation lies in its comparative methodology, which reveals that both the loss and illegitimate acquisition of power produce similar patterns of psychological disintegration through different mechanisms. By emphasizing the relationship between symbolic legitimacy and psychic stability, the research bridges political and psychoanalytic approaches and offers a unified model for understanding madness in Shakespearean tragedy. This perspective highlights how transformations in sovereignty shape both social order and the psychological foundations of identity.
5.6 Theoretical and Methodological Limitations of the Comparative Psychoanalytic Study
While this dissertation offers a comparative psychoanalytic interpretation of madness, power, and identity in King Lear and Macbeth, certain limitations shape the scope and applicability of its findings. These limitations arise from the theoretical framework employed, the interpretive nature of literary analysis, and the focused selection of texts. Acknowledging these constraints is essential for situating the study within its methodological boundaries and for identifying directions for future research. The following points outline the primary limitations that inform the interpretive scope of this research.
1. Theoretical Limitation: Reliance on Psychoanalytic Frameworks
This study primarily adopts Freudian, Lacanian, and object-relations approaches to interpret psychological fragmentation in the protagonists. While psychoanalytic theory provides a rich framework for examining unconscious conflict, repression, and identity formation, it represents only one interpretive lens among many possible critical approaches. Alternative perspectives—such as historicist, political, or performance-based readings—may produce different insights into the relationship between power and madness. Consequently, the emphasis on psychoanalysis may foreground internal psychological processes while comparatively limiting attention to material, historical, or theatrical dimensions of Shakespearean tragedy.
2. Textual Scope Limitation: Restricted Corpus of Shakespearean Tragedy
This research is confined to a comparative analysis of King Lear and Macbeth as primary texts for examining the relationship between political power and psychological disintegration. While these plays offer compelling and contrasting models of madness emerging from the loss and acquisition of authority, the restricted corpus inevitably limits the broader applicability of the study’s conclusions. The interpretive findings are therefore context-specific, shaped by the thematic structure, characterization, and symbolic dynamics unique to these two tragedies.
Limited Generalizability within Shakespeare’s Tragic Canon
Shakespeare’s tragedies present diverse representations of madness, identity, and moral conflict. By focusing exclusively on two plays, the study cannot claim to represent the full spectrum of Shakespearean explorations of psychological breakdown. Other tragedies may depict madness through different narrative mechanisms, philosophical concerns, or social dynamics, which remain outside the analytical scope of this research.
Dependence on Specific Dramatic Structures of Power
The conclusions drawn in this dissertation are closely tied to the distinct dramatic trajectories of the selected plays—Lear’s psychological collapse following abdication and Macbeth’s mental disintegration following the violent acquisition of kingship. These contrasting models of authority provide valuable comparative insight; however, they reflect particular dramatic configurations rather than universal patterns of power and subjectivity across early modern tragedy.
Depth of Analysis Prioritized over Breadth of Coverage
The restricted textual focus enables detailed psychoanalytic interpretation of language, symbolism, and character psychology. However, this depth of analysis necessarily narrows the range of comparative evidence available to support broader theoretical claims about power and madness in literature. The findings should therefore be understood as intensive case studies rather than comprehensive conclusions applicable to all Shakespearean works.
Contextual Specificity of Thematic Interpretation
Themes such as sovereignty, identity fragmentation, guilt, and repression are interpreted within the symbolic and narrative frameworks of the selected plays. Because these thematic structures are shaped by particular plot developments, character relationships, and dramatic contexts, the interpretive outcomes remain anchored to the textual conditions of the chosen tragedies rather than extending universally across literary traditions.
3. Methodological Limitation: Interpretive Nature of Literary Analysis
As a qualitative and interpretive study, the analysis depends on close reading, theoretical application, and critical interpretation rather than empirical or measurable data. Interpretations of madness, hallucination, and identity fragmentation are shaped by theoretical orientation and scholarly perspective, which means alternative readings of the same textual evidence remain possible. The subjective dimension inherent in psychoanalytic literary criticism may therefore limit claims to definitive conclusions, positioning the findings as interpretive rather than universally demonstrable.
4. Conceptual Limitation: Emphasis on Psychological Over Social Context
The study prioritizes internal psychic processes—such as repression, guilt, desire, and ego fragmentation—over broader socio-political and historical conditions of the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods. While power is examined as a symbolic and psychological structure, the analysis does not fully explore the historical realities of monarchy, governance, or early modern political ideology. As a result, the representation of power is interpreted primarily through psychological and symbolic frameworks rather than through an integrated historical-cultural analysis.
Concluding Statement on Limitations
Despite these limitations, the study provides a coherent and theoretically grounded interpretation of how transformations in political authority contribute to the fragmentation of identity and the emergence of madness in Shakespearean tragedy. By clearly defining its theoretical and textual boundaries, the research establishes a focused analytical framework that contributes to psychoanalytic literary criticism while also opening pathways for future interdisciplinary and comparative investigations into power, subjectivity, and psychological disintegration in early modern literature.
5.7 Implications and Future Research
Key Implications:
Madness as a Structural Psychological Response — The study establishes that madness in King Lear and Macbeth is not incidental but emerges from disruptions in sovereign authority that destabilize identity.
Integration of Political and Psychoanalytic Criticism — The dissertation demonstrates that authority functions simultaneously as a political institution and a psychological organizing structure shaping subjectivity.
Relational Nature of Identity — Psychological stability is shown to depend on recognition, legitimacy, and symbolic order rather than individual autonomy.
Ethical Dimensions of Psychological Collapse — Madness reveals moral consequences of power, exposing vulnerability, guilt, and the limits of domination.
Interdisciplinary Relevance — The findings contribute to broader debates in literary theory, psychoanalysis, and political philosophy concerning power and the formation of the self.
The implications of this research extend beyond Shakespearean literary analysis by establishing a comprehensive framework for understanding how structures of authority shape psychological experience. The dissertation demonstrates that subjectivity is neither fixed nor autonomous but sustained through symbolic legitimacy and relational recognition. When authority is destabilized, the structures that organize desire and moral regulation collapse, producing fragmentation of identity. This insight redefines madness as a meaningful psychological structure embedded within political transformation. By integrating psychoanalytic theory with political interpretation, the study offers a unified model that deepens understanding of tragedy as a genre that explores the psychological foundations of power. The ethical dimension of this framework further reveals that psychological collapse exposes the limits of domination and the inevitability of vulnerability, thereby positioning tragedy as a site where questions of identity, legitimacy, and moral responsibility converge.
5.7.1 Directions for Future Research
Future research may expand the comparative psychoanalytic framework developed in this study by examining the relationship between power, madness, and identity in other Shakespearean tragedies or literary works from different periods. Scholars may explore whether similar psychological patterns appear in texts where authority becomes unstable or illegitimate. Integrating performance studies could also help analyze how staging, acting, and audience reception influence the representation of psychological breakdown. Interdisciplinary approaches combining literary criticism, psychoanalysis, and cultural theory may further deepen understanding of subject formation and symbolic legitimacy. Such studies can refine the theoretical model proposed in this research and broaden its applicability across literary and cultural contexts.
5.7.2 Theoretical and Critical Contributions
This study contributes to literary scholarship by developing a cohesive interpretive framework that connects psychoanalytic theory with political analysis. It demonstrates that transformations in sovereign power activate unconscious conflict and destabilize identity, reframing madness in King Lear and Macbeth as a structural response to disrupted authority. By emphasizing the role of recognition, relational identity, and symbolic order, the research clarifies how subjectivity is shaped within structures of power. The study therefore advances Shakespearean criticism by linking tragic psychology with political legitimacy. This framework can also guide future studies exploring the psychological dimensions of authority in literature.
5.7.3 Broader Literary and Interdisciplinary Significance
The broader significance of this research lies in showing how literary representations of power reveal important insights about human subjectivity and identity formation. By examining the relationship between authority and psychological fragmentation, the study positions King Lear and Macbeth as texts that illuminate universal tensions between legitimacy, recognition, and the self. The findings highlight the value of interdisciplinary dialogue between literary studies, psychoanalytic theory, and political thought. This approach demonstrates that tragic literature can contribute to wider theoretical discussions about power, ethics, and psychological experience. Consequently, Shakespearean tragedy remains highly relevant for understanding the complex relationship between authority and human consciousness.
5.7.4 Concluding Synthesis of Implications
Taken together, the implications of this study affirm that the psychological experience of madness in King Lear and Macbeth cannot be separated from the structures of authority that organize identity, recognition, and moral regulation. By demonstrating that shifts in sovereign power activate unconscious conflict and destabilize symbolic legitimacy, the dissertation offers a comprehensive model through which literary representations of power can be understood as psychological phenomena. This synthesis reinforces the central argument that subjectivity is inherently relational and contingent upon symbolic frameworks that remain vulnerable to disruption. Consequently, Shakespearean tragedy emerges not only as a dramatic exploration of political order but also as a profound investigation into the fragile foundations of the self, illuminating how the collapse of authority reveals the limits of human coherence and the structural instability underlying identity itself.
The research further establishes that authority functions as both a political institution and a psychological organizing principle. Through the comparative analysis of King Lear and Macbeth, the study shows that madness emerges as a structured response to transformations in power rather than as a simple emotional disturbance. The collapse or corruption of authority exposes the self to anxiety, guilt, and moral tension, revealing the deep connection between political structures and psychological experience.
The comparative framework also demonstrates that different configurations of power produce similar patterns of psychological disintegration. The loss of authority in King Lear exposes vulnerability and the absence of recognition, while the illegitimate acquisition of power in Macbeth generates guilt and repression. Despite these differences, both trajectories reveal that identity is symbolically mediated and cannot remain stable when the structures that sustain authority become disrupted.
By integrating psychoanalytic perspectives, the study offers a unified interpretation that connects political transformation with psychological consequence. Emotional excess, hallucinations, and moral disintegration are understood as expressions of unconscious conflict activated by unstable authority. This approach redefines Shakespearean tragedy as a psychological exploration of sovereignty and identity, demonstrating that crises of power simultaneously produce crises of subjectivity.
Ultimately, the dissertation concludes that the struggle for authority is inseparable from the struggle for selfhood. Shakespeare’s tragedies illustrate that the collapse or corruption of power reshapes the psychological structures through which individuals experience meaning, morality, and identity. Madness therefore becomes the psychological expression of disrupted sovereignty, revealing the fragile foundations of human subjectivity and the enduring relevance of Shakespearean tragedy in understanding the relationship between power and identity.
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