Fragmentation in Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse
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Abstract
Fragmentation is one of the most important narrative techniques used by modernist writers.
This inquiry attempts to demonstrate the applicability of such a literary device on the
modernist novel To the Lighthouse, written by Virginia Woolf in 1927; thus, we attempt to
figure out how fragmentation affects the tactfulness of the language in the novel. We also tend
to explore its usefulness for modernists in managing the plot of the literary work to create
suspense and engage the readers’ perspectives. Based on the hypothesis of the significance of
fragmentation in the process of nonlinearity and variation in modernist literature, this study is
structured upon a theoretical part in which we investigate the foundations of the technique as
well as a pragmatic approach to fragmentation in the novel. In addition to a an analysis of
aesthetic standards that influence fragmentation in To the Lighthouse
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https://theses.univ-temouchent.edu.dz/opac_css/doc_num.php?explnum_id=1647
