Freuds psychodynamic developmental theory explains 5psychosexualstages which are oral, anal, phallic, latent and genital. There are 2 sections of the phallicstage which are the pre-phallic stage where children have noconcept of genderidentity, they have nounderstanding of male or female and dontorganisethemselves or others this way. The other stage is the phallicstage which occurs around 3-6 years old and boysexperience the oedipuscomplex and girlsexperience the electracomplex
during the phallic stage boysdevelopincesteousfeelingstowards their mother. They want their mother for themselves and so they feel a jealoushatred for their father who has what they boydesires. Boys recognise that their father is morepowerful and they fear that on discovering their son’sdesire for the mother, their father will castrate the son
Freud called the electra complex penisenvy. It occurs in the phallic stage and girlsfeel in competition with their mother for theirfather’slove.Girls also resent their mother because they believe that she is responsible for their lack of penis
for a boy the conflict between his desires and his castrationanxiety is resolved when the boygives up his love for his mother and begins to identify with his father. For girls, they acknowledge that they will never have the penis that they desire. They substitute this with a desire to have theirownchildren and through this they finallyidentify with their mother and her gender
boys adopt the attitudes and values of their father and girlsadopt those of their mother. Freud referred to this as internalisation of parentsidentity
Little Hans was a 5 year old boy with a morbidfear of being bitten by a horse. His fear appeared to stem from an incident when he had seen a horsecollapse and die in the street.Freud’sinterpretation was that Han’sfear of being castrated by his father because of Han‘slove for his mother. Freud suggested that Hans had transferred his fear of his father onto horsesviadisplacement
One strength is there is support for the oedipuscomplex.Freud’stheory means that for boys, normaldevelopment depends on beingraised by at least onemale parent. There is some support for this idea. Researchers rated the genderidentity of 49 boys aged 3-11.75% of those who judgedgenderdisturbed had nobiological or substitutefatherliving with them. This suggests that being raised with nofather may have a negativeimpact upon gender identity, in line with Freud’stheory would predict
One limitation is Freud’s theory doesn’t fully explainfemaledevelopment.Freud’sidea of penis envy has been criticised as merely reflecting the era he lived and workedin, where males held so much of the power. Researchers argued that in fact men‘swombenvy was moreprominent. This challenges the idea that femalegenderdevelopment was founded on a desire to want to be likemen
One limitation is that the theory is pseudoscience. Freud is criticised for the lack of rigour in his methods. Also, many of his concepts and unconscious and untestable. This makes Freud’stheorypseudoscience as his keyideas cannot be falsified. This questions the validity of Freud’stheory as it is notbased on soundscientificevidence