The Portrayal of Mental Disorders in The British Modernist Novel “A comparative study between Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway and Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis”
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Abstract
Modernism, as a literary movement, was shaped by a radical shift on the structure and the
themes of the literary works, mainly on the construction of the novel. This change was shown
in the appearance of new narrative techniques such as stream of consciousness, interior
monologues, fragmentation, etc. In fact, these techniques were employed by the modernist
writers as Virginia Woolf and Franz Kafka, as an emphasis on the role and the power of the
human psyche and internal realm of the individuals, applying Freud’s psychoanalytic
theories. In this regard, the combination between conscious and unconscious led them to
stress on the theme of madness and mental disorders as shell-shock, schizophrenia, paranoia,
etc. Virginia Woolf, in her psychological novel, Mrs. Dalloway, projects the mind of a
traumatized, shell shocked war veteran who commits suicide in order to escape from his
unhelpful modernist society. In a similar way, Kafka, in his novella, The Metamorphosis,
pictures the meaningless life of a salesman, called Gregor Samsa as he transforms into a giant
bug, revealing the theme of insanity. Moreover, in these modernist works, the theme of
madness in presented in parallel with subthemes as self and identity, androgyny, and the
absurdity of existence.
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https://theses.univ-temouchent.edu.dz/opac_css/doc_num.php?explnum_id=1536
