Armed with Madness

Jed Rasula
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Abstract

Increased attention to psychology in the modern novel afforded expanded thematic access to aberrant states of consciousness. In a way, this returned the novel to its prototype in Don Quixote, and rejuvenated awareness of depicted mania in realist novels. Eight novels are profiled here (by Fowles, Fitzgerald, Lowry, Dostoyevsky, Canetti, Mann, Conrad, and Woolf) in order to examine narrative strategies for exploring madness, and implicating the reader’s consciousness as a participatory component of mental aberration. This approach counters Georg Lukács’s contention that depictions of mental aberration violated the novel’s obligation to depict normality. Modernism, he claimed, privileged distortion, but the novelists examined here suggest that the historical pressures of modernity provided distortions exceeding any particular imaginative license. These pressures are acutely rendered in portraits of domesticity in The Secret Agent by Conrad and Mrs Dalloway by Woolf, two among many such reckonings with geo-political trauma casting a shadow over private life.
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用疯狂武装自己
现代小说对心理学的关注增加了对异常意识状态的主题接触。在某种程度上,这使小说回到了《堂吉诃德》的原型,并使人们重新认识到现实主义小说中所描绘的狂躁。本文介绍了八部小说(作者分别是福尔斯、菲茨杰拉德、洛瑞、陀思妥耶夫斯基、卡内蒂、曼恩、康拉德和伍尔夫),目的是研究探索疯狂的叙事策略,并暗示读者的意识是精神失常的一个参与组成部分。这种方法反驳了Georg Lukács的论点,即对精神失常的描述违反了小说描绘正常的义务。他声称,现代主义赋予了扭曲的特权,但这里考察的小说家表明,现代性的历史压力提供了超出任何特定想象力许可的扭曲。这些压力在康拉德的《特工》和伍尔夫的《达洛维夫人》中对家庭生活的描写中得到了尖锐的体现,这是许多地缘政治创伤给私人生活蒙上阴影的作品中的两部。
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