Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
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“curled and whole like a wave”.. On the basis of Froula’s insights I would like to claim that the
reader’s attention is attracted because the moments of being described in Woolf’s fiction are rare moments of insight during her characters’ daily lives when they can see reality from a totally different perspective and understand the importance of details that typically seem inconsequential and vague. In her analysis of Woolf’s fiction, Lee (1977) also says that the novels of Woolf were deeply influenced by other writers and philosophers who had been experimenting with a new approach to time treatment years before she was born, and she was aware of their successes and failures. For instance, according to Stevenson (1998:107), Woolf’s ideas were strongly influenced by the philosopher Henri Bergson, who believed that the difference between time measured by a clock and time actually experienced is the distinction between a time patterned upon space and a time patterned upon pure duration. Indeed, Stevenson invites us to compare these two opinions concerning time and temporality. Bergson based his whole philosophy on the idea that chronological or clock time is unreal and that reality can be found only in man’s inner sense of duration, which is a state of constant flow existing within the mind in which the present, past, and future are intermingled and impossible to separate. By comparison, we can find similar ideas in Woolf’s fiction and especially in her essays where she expresses the claim that all states of time intermingle together, ignoring the unnatural succession which clock time attempts to impose. In her 68 diary, she often meditates upon the question of human life and the amount of time each person possesses and asks (1953:140): “Is life very solid or shifting? I am haunted by the two contradictions. This has gone on for ever; will last for ever; goes down to the bottom of the world – this moment I stand on. Also it is transitory, flying, diaphanous. I shall pass like a cloud on the waves. Perhaps it may be that though we change, one flying after another, so quick, so quick, yet we are somehow successive and continuous we human beings”. As the example illustrates, in Woolf’s opinion, internal time is pure duration, which may, in a single moment, contain the experience that gives significance to a lifetime. Obviously, Woolf borrowed some ideas not only from Bergson but from Joyce as well. Influenced by the ideas of Joyce, she maintained that real time is not the time imposed upon man by space, but the time that occurs within his mind. Sanders emphasizes the fact (1994) that Joyce’s writing puts emphasis on instants of recall, the central theme of all his novels; the past is rediscovered many times. Indeed, Woolf supported Joyce’s understanding and use of the notion of time and thus, she can be called a novelist of multidimensional time, based on certain involuntary memory, which gives past persons and scenes a symbolic depth they never had before. For instance, in her masterpiece To the Lighthouse, the writer puts emphasis on memory as a method of interrupting the passing time. In the novel, as Sanders argues, a sound that the characters heard or an odour they caught long ago can be sensed once more in their memories, simultaneously in the present and the past, real without being of the present moment, and the past is felt by means of senses, visual and audible images. This can be clearly seen in the following short extracts from the novel (1927) describing the deserted family house during the war: (30) […] certain airs entered the drawing room, questioning and wondering. (144) (31) […] the wind sent its spies about the house. (151) Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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