- All's Well That Ends Well
- Antony and Cleopatra
- As You Like It
- The Comedy of Errors
- Coriolanus
- Cymbeline
- Hamlet
- Henry IV, Part 1
- Henry IV, Part 2
- Henry V
- Henry VI, Part 1
- Henry VI, Part 2
- Henry VI, Part 3
- Henry VIII
- Julius Caesar
- King John
- King Lear
- Love's Labor's Lost
- A Lover's Complaint
- Macbeth
- Measure for Measure
- The Merchant of Venice
- The Merry Wives of Windsor
- A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Much Ado About Nothing
- Othello
- Pericles
- The Rape of Lucrece
- Richard II
- Richard III
- Romeo and Juliet
- Shakespeare's Sonnets
- The Taming of the Shrew
- The Tempest
- Timon of Athens
- Titus Andronicus
- Troilus and Cressida
- Twelfth Night
- The Two Gentlemen of Verona
- Venus and Adonis
- The Winter's Tale
When the Baldry household meets with Dr. Anderson, the latest of several doctors who’ve been summoned to try to cure Chris, he explains certain tenets of then-current Freudian psychoanalytic theory to them. Kitty objects that surely Chris could regain his memory through an exertion of will, but Dr. Anderson dismisses this as nonsense. He argues that so-called self-control is essentially a myth. The more important part of a person is his or her deeply buried “essential self,” which has ways of getting what it wants no matter how firmly its desires are suppressed. In Chris’s case, then, his deeply suppressed…