Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
Psychological and Ideational Relations between Time and Space
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4.1. Psychological and Ideational Relations between Time and Space
In the Discourse of the Novel According to Lee (1977), To the Lighthouse is widely considered one of the most important literary works of the twentieth century. With this innovative novel, Woolf established herself as one of the leading writers of modernism. Indeed, the novel develops original literary techniques to reveal dramatic human experience in the modern shifting world and to disclose different views of inner and outer reality. On the surface, the writer here tells the story of the Ramsay family. However, I am sure that in its heart, the novel is a deep psychological study of time in which the writer reveals how humans are influenced by its endless passage. To illustrate this statement, I propose the following figure: 73 Figure 6. Psychological and Ideational Layers of Portraying Reality in the Novel Figure 6. Psychological and Ideational Layers of Portraying Reality in the Novel In my opinion, the semantic core of the novel is based on the trivial understanding of time and space that can be subdivided into three interrelated layers. First of all, it is possible to speak about the historic context and natural time that the characters are surrounded by. The real or historical time in the novel can be understood in two ways: on the one hand, the action of the novel covers more than ten years, on the other hand, all the action fits into the temporal interval of one day, or twenty-four hours. The first and third chapters are composed as a number of moments, in which the various characters are occupied with daily activities - reading, knitting, painting, eating, sailing - giving them plenty of time for introspection and reflections. Significantly, the only real events, or action, in the book take place in the second part where ten years are summarized in a couple of pages: the Ramsays leave their house, later the reader learns about the death of Mrs. Ramsay and of her two children. It seems that the book divides time into passive and active periods, into the periods of simply being and actively participating in the processes of life. In my opinion, the descriptions of The Window and The Lighthouse are set up as mirror images, separated by time, and dominated by the presence and absence of Mrs. Ramsay. During the first part of the book there is talk of visiting the lighthouse, on a small island on the coast, an expedition marvelous for the children, especially for the youngest Ramsay’s son, James. Nevertheless, circumstances and the weather conditions prevent the family from going on this trip. Ten years later, the remaining family members do go to the lighthouse, but it is not the same as they had once imagined it. James, now being a teenager, realizes, comparing the lighthouse of his childhood to the one he is sailing towards, that everything in this world has a great deal more meanings and unknown connections than it seems at the first glance. Thus, there is enough evidence to claim that in To the Lighthouse Woolf skillfully shows how different characters, at different points in time, see things in different ways: for children, the lighthouse was similar to a fairytale, something fabulous, mystical, and HISTORY STORY VISION 74 powerful. However, for their parents, the trip was an ordinary event which at the same time appealed to their forgotten dreams and plans, visions and flashbacks form their youth and invited them to look for the eternal meaning and the truth in life. What conclusions could we make from this temporal overview of the novel? I would like to claim that it is impossible to understand the meaning of this interestingly contracted and prolonged natural time without having discussed the second layer of the dimensions of time and space in the book, namely, the layer of story. The whole situation of the novel can be understood as a product of imagination, as it portrays the lives of people who stand as individual figures and as icons of certain universal values at the same time. I adhere to Lee (1977) who presupposes that Mrs. Ramsay, the main figure of the book, seems to represent romantic Victorian ideals combined with a questioning rebellious modernist human spirit, Mr. Ramsay, by comparison, stands for the victory of reason and empirical cognition of the surrounding world, while the painter Lily seems to embody the complicated nature of art and artist. Thus, having all these considerations taken into account, the whole temporal scope of the novel may be treated not only as a collection of single moments from people’s lives but as a universal symbol of time, namely, of the temporal span of human life. The duration of the action covers twenty four hours, from the evening up to the morning of the other day. Thus, having analyzed the suggestions made by Stevenson, Lee, and other critics, I adhere to the idea that from the temporal perspective, the novel may serve as a depiction of human life. The first chapter, thus, may be compared to the period of childhood and youth, when a person if full of future dreams and intentions, but is inexperienced and dependent on his family to seek for their fulfillment. What is more, grown up people usually admit recalling only a few moments or events from their early days, that is why this part of the novel also mainly consists of small pieces of experience, encounters, and daily activities. Indeed, reality, when conceived of as a collection of fleeting moments, seems as chaotic and unpredictable. Each of the main characters struggles with this realization, and they all grasp for symbols of permanence and stability despite their understanding of the transience of experience. I believe that for Mrs. Ramsay, the steady stroke of the Lighthouse light represents stability and permanence. For this reason, she connects herself to it, unites herself with it, in the hope of gaining a similar sense of connection both to her present and to eternity. In fact, she seeks not only to unite herself with the permanent objects in the physical world, but also to unite her friends, family, and guests in the creation of lasting beauty. The second chapter may be compared to the period of adulthood when our consciousness, our perceptions, thoughts and ideas, that impose order on the world-a subjective order to be sure, but this is the power that makes people lead their lives. Indeed, this is the period of growing self– 75 respect and independence, or, in some case, of personal tragedy because of inability to shape oneself in the way one would like to. Thus, as seen from the second chapter in the book, the characters face cruelty and unpredictability of reality, meaninglessness of war and sorrow of loss, loneliness, and death. However, this period also serves as a time of reshaping the characters’ world understanding, reformulating values and growing inside. According to me, this is a story about a modernist man, who faces both the destructive force of innovations and the new possibilities to move further in spite of loss and alienation. I would like to claim that the third layer of temporality in the book is related to visions, something unreal, difficult to achieve, and at the same time mystical and scary. If we agree that this novel may serve as a symbolic chronology of human life, the last chapter then naturally depicts an elderly person’s situation and point of view. As the reader learns, towards the end of the novel, the characters reflect upon their experience in the past, compare the present with the past of ten years ago, and make the best of what’s left (they concentrate on finishing a painting, finally going to the lighthouse). In my opinion, his is the chapter of memories and nostalgia. The characters aim to make the final sense of the world. To my mind, towards the end of the novel, Woolf shows reality to be nothing but a shifting constellation of subjective experiences, of people alone with their thoughts, guarding themselves against the vast emptiness and chaos that surrounds them. The disintegration into chaos of life is shown most clearly in the ten year period when the family house stands empty. But it is also visible in those problematic passages of the last part which convey the empty space between people into which all human experience is threatened to disappear without any footnote like a tear into water. Consequently, I am convinced that all the trivial thoughts and perceptions that make up our consciousness can be seen as attempts to control that chaos. More than just trying to realistically describe human consciousness, Woolf shows human beings in an existential nakedness and simplicity: our trivial, subjective experience is all that we possess in this life, and no human being so far managed to reveal the chaotic meaning of existence which consists of the periodicity of life and death. Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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