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A General Overview of Virginia Woolf’s Fiction and the Concept of Time
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3.4. A General Overview of Virginia Woolf’s Fiction and the Concept of Time
According to Lee (1977:23), with no doubt, one of the most prominent literary figures of the twentieth century, Woolf is widely admired for her technical innovations in the novel, most notably her development of stream-of-consciousness narrative. Woolf’s writing reveals her literary talent as well as her interest in the multidimensional nature of human existence. Indeed, her original and innovative literary works explore the structures of human life, from the nature of relationships to the experience of time. As Stevenson adds (1998), her writing also deals with the issues relevant to her living epoch and the literary Bloomsbury circle. Throughout her works, she celebrates and analyzes the major Bloomsbury values of aestheticism and independence. Moreover, as Allen suggests (1954), her stream of consciousness style was influenced by, and responded to, the ideas of the thinker Henri Bergson and the novelist James Joyce, whose impact on Woolf’s novels I have foregrounded in the previous chapters. Baldic (1996) raises the opinion that in her literary works Woolf always questions whether all this surface detail in fiction makes literature valuable. She expresses hesitation related to the notion art and aims to focus of the deep layer analysis of literature. Similarly to Baldic, in Froula’s words (2007:13), influenced by the ideas of Bloomsbury Group, Woolf believed that “art must submit its judgements to moral law”. In her opinion, a writer’s mission, or task, is to analyze the depths of the present inner and outer reality instead of just inventing some unreal debatable details. Indeed, the new technique of stream of consciousness was applied in her narrative in order to express new revolutionary concepts. The consciousness of the characters in Woolf’s fiction was not simply described as in the works of Realism, but elaborately filtered through showing the way the characters are thinking and interpreting events. The feelings of the characters and the inner perceptions of life acquired a totally new meaning and in order to achieve this, the omniscient narrator was introduced throughout her novels. For instance, in the sentence “Had there been an axe handy …seized it” from To the Lighthouse(1996:7) the writer employs straightforward omniscient narrator in order to describe James’ anger at his father who does not want James to go to the Lighthouse. Although James does not utter these words aloud, the reader perceives them through the voice of narrator who knows everything that characters feel or think. Why is such way of 67 representing characters’ thoughts effective? Well, it is obvious that Woolf’s characters arerarel described directly; instead, they are depicted via their thoughts. Lee believes (1977:86) that the aim of all these strange techniques of description was to express continuity and mutability of the individual identity at the same time. Indeed, in their literary works both Joyce and Woolf analysed the depth of human mind with the help of the interior monologue and the stream of consciousness, which enabled the writers to explore memories, desires, dreams of their characters, who could be observed in their external and interior appearance. However, Froula (2007:13) thinks that this way of handling the protagonists of Woolf’s works was even deeper than that of Joyce. Whereas Joyce examined the depths of the ego, or human essence, Woolf never let her characters’ thoughts flow freely. Instead, she maintained logical and grammatical organization of every single sentence so that every reader could understand the essence of the characters’ words or thoughts. In other words, her narrative technique was based on the synthesis of streams of thought into a third-person, past tense narrative. She gave the impression of simultaneous connections between the inner and the outer world, the past and the present, speech and silence. As Mrs Ramsay says in To the Lighthouse (1927:55), the whole human life consists of “little separate incidents which one lived one by one” and which she then describes as Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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