7 For a characteristic Freudian description of the penetration of neurosis in psychoanalysis, see Freud, “The Technique of Psycho-Analysis,” in An Outline of Psycho-Analysis, ed. and trans. James Strachey (New York: Norton. 1969). p. 31 :
With the neurotics, then, we make our pact : complete candour on one side and strict discretion on the other… . what we want to hear from our patient is not only what he knows and conceals from other people; he is to tell us too what he does not know. ... He is to tell us not only what he can say intentionally and willingly, what will give him relief like a confession, but everything else as well that his self-observation yields him, everything that comes into his head, even if it is disagreeable for him to say it, even if it seems to him unimportant or actually nonsensical. If he can succeed after this injunction in putting his self-criticism out of action, he will present us with a mass of material—thoughts, ideas, recollections—which are already subject to the influence of the unconscious, which are often its direct derivatives, and which thus put us in a position to conjecture his repressed unconscious material and to extend, by the information we give him, his ego's knowledge of his unconscious.
This is not exactly the tendency in Kafka's fiction observed by Theodore Adorno in his “Aufzeichnungen zu Kafka,” in Prismen (Munich: Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, 1963), pp. 256–57:
Anstatt die Neurose zu heilen, sucht er in ihr selbst die heilende Kraft, die der Erkenntnis: die Wunden, welche die Gesellschaft dem Einzelnen einbrennt, werden von diesem als Chiffren der gesellschaftlichen Unwahrheit, als Negativ der Wahrheit gelesen. Seine Gewalt ist eine des Abbaus. Er reiβt die beschwichtigende Fassade vorm Unmaβ des Leidens nieder, der die rationale Kontrolle mehr stets sich einfügt. Im Abbau—nie war das Wort populärer als in Kafkas Todesjahr —hält er nicht, wie die Psychologie, beim Subjekt inne, sondern dringt auf das Stoffliche, bloβ Daseiende durch, das im ungeminderten Sturz des nachgebenden, aller Selbstbehauptung sich entäuβernden Bewuβtseins auf dem subjektiven Grunde sich darbietet. Die Flucht durch den Menschen hindurch ins Nichtmenschliche—das ist Kafkas epische Bahn.