vendredi 3 avril 2026

The dream interpreter



“A sleeping man holds in a circle around him the thread of the hours, the order of the years and of the worlds. He consults them instinctively upon waking and reads there, in a second, the point on the earth he occupies, the time that has elapsed until his awakening; but their ranks may become entangled, may break. If, toward morning, after some insomnia, sleep overtakes him while reading, in a posture too different from that in which he fell asleep, it is enough for his arm to rise to halt and drive back the sun; and in the first minute of his awakening, he will not know the time, he will think he has only just gone to bed. If he dozes off in a position still more displaced and divergent, for example after dinner sitting in an armchair, then the upheaval will be complete in the disorbited worlds, the magical armchair will make him travel at great speed through time and space, and at the moment of opening his eyelids, he will believe himself lying down some months earlier in another land.”

Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time


– Tell me, what is this dream interpreter?
– In Antiquity, the dream interpreter is embodied by authors such as Artemidorus of Daldis, whose work Oneirocritica is one of the most complete treatises on the interpretation of dreams.
– What does he say?
– For him, the dream is not a mere inner fantasy: it is a coded language, often oriented toward the future.
– And what is it for?
– The dream interpreter thus acts as a translator between two regimes of reality: the visible, diurnal one, and the oblique, nocturnal one.
– He tells by day, with clarity, what happens in the night!
– Yes… but he does not decipher a transparent message. The dream is not a clear text written in another language: it is already deformation and condensation. What we see in a dream is never simply what is. The dream interpreter must therefore work in a space where meaning is buried within the very form of its obscuring.
– And today?
– If I am to believe our master, with modernity, the dream interpreter, if he still exists, can no longer be only a translator. He becomes almost a geographer of these displacements, a reader of these throws of the dice, not by uncovering a stable meaning, but by producing it in the very movement of its deformation; and notably in Sigmund Freud, the figure of the dream interpreter is transformed. Interpretation no longer aims merely to predict or to warn: it becomes a work of tracing back toward repressed desires, toward a concealed psychic scene.
– The dream would no longer be addressed by the gods…
– No, it would be produced by a divided subject.
– What does that mean?
– It is a bit like us… who are, in turn, visible and invisible… and bearers of a discourse that is not always our own…
– Yet something remains: the idea that the dream speaks otherwise, that it says by not saying, that it shows by disguising…
– Like those images in which we appear…

– At this point, as you say, the dream interpreter profoundly meets our own horizon: that of the image as event. For the dream is not a stable image. It is what happens to the image. It folds it, deforms it, makes it arise within a regime where ordinary laws no longer hold. It therefore does not merely interpret signs: it witnesses a kind of birth, or emergence, of the visible in an unstable form.
One might then say that the dream interpreter is less a reader than an active witness. He does not receive a meaning already there: he participates in its appearing. In this, he resembles the spectator you once spoke to me about, the one who “attends” the spectacle and gives it existence… through his presence. He lends assistance to the dream, not by stabilizing it, but by accepting to enter its regime.
There is something even more troubling.
– Tell me!
– The dream, by definition, gives itself without a clear subject. Who speaks in the dream? Who sees? Who acts? The pronominal “what happens” is at work here. The dream is not simply something we do: it is something that is done in us, without our being its identifiable authors. The dream interpreter stands precisely before this: an event without evident origin.
– Thus, the dream interpreter does not only seek “what it means.”
– No, he stands at the edge of a more radical question: where does it come from, and how does it come to be as an image?
– In this perspective, one might almost say that the dream interpreter is a liminal figure, an inhabitant of the threshold.
– A kind of customs officer!
– In a way… but he stands between waking and sleeping, between form and the formless. He does not close the enigma… between language and silence… he makes it shareable.
And perhaps that is the deepest point… the dream interpreter does not dispel the dream. He prolongs it, by letting it pass into another form of waking.