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Critique and Semiotics
Digital network scientific journal for specialists in philology and semiotics |
DOI: 10.25205/2307-1737 Roskomnadzor certificate number Эл № ФС 77-84784 | |
Kritika i Semiotika (Critique and Semiotics) | |
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ArticleName: The Literary Madness: Language as an Indicator of Insanity in the Fiction of the 20th Century (1920s) Authors: E. B. Kryukova, O. A. Koval Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology RAS, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation; Russian Christian Humanitarian Academy, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Abstract: The article is devoted to the phenomenon of insanity in the artistic discourse of the 1920s. Such a literary reception is interesting because, on the one hand, it goes against the dominant clinical approaches at that time, which emphasized the medical aspect of the problem, and on the other hand, it anticipates the antipsychiatric philoophical theories, whereby the marginal figure of the madman was gradually included in the social space. Using the example of three iconic works of modernist literature, the article demonstrates how innovative techniques of working with language make the speech of a mentally ill person distinctly audible. Virginia Woolf in “Mrs Dalloway” conveys the disastrous experience of the First World War through the stream of consciousness of the mentally traumatized character Septimus Smith. Woolf puts an anti-militaristic appeal into the mouth of a madman and thus makes him the herald of a simple truth that reasonable people, however, prefer not to notice. Ryūnosuke Akutagawa’s short story “Cogwheels” reproduces the experiences of the author, who feels the approach of insanity. Madness opens up as a borderline case that reveals its deep kinship with the source of writing, understood as a lack of form, lack of meaning, lack of creation. William Faulkner in the novel “The Sound and the Fury” gives the gift of speech to the weak-minded Benji, who doesn’t talk. His im-possible narrative offers an alternative to the linear logic, which clarify Benji’s confusing narration but fail to rival it in conveying the directness of human suffering or happiness. Keywords: insanity, language, philosophy and literature, “Mrs Dalloway”, Virginia Woolf, “Cogwheels”, Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, “The Sound and the Fury”, William Faulkner Bibliography: Bleikasten A. An Easter without Resurrection? In: William Faulkner’s The sound and the fury. New Edition. Ed. by H. Bloom. Broomall, PA, Chelsea House Publications, 2008, p. 41–67. DeMeester K. Trauma, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, and Obstacles to Post-War Recovery in Mrs. Dalloway. In: Virginia Woolf and Trauma. Ed. by S. Henke, D. Eberly, J. Lilienfeld. New York, Pace University Press, 2007, p. 77–93. Derrida J. Cogito i istoriya bezumiya [Cogito and the History of Madness]. Trans. by S. Fokina. In: Derrida J. Pis’mo i razlichie [Writing and Difference]. St. Petersburg, Akademicheskiy proekt Publ., 2000, p. 43–82. (in Russ.) Felman Sh. Writing and Madness (Literature / Philosophy / Psychoanalysis). Stanford, Stanford University Press, 2003, 294 p. Folkner v Virginskom universitete (Besedy so studentami i prepodavatelyami) (1957–1958) [Faulkner at University of Virginia (Conversation with Students and Professors]. Trans. by Yu. Palievskoy. In: Faulkner W. Stat’i, rechi, interv’yu, pis’ma [Essays, Speeches, Interviews, Letters]. Moscow, Raduga Publ., 1985, p. 245–361. (in Russ.) Foucault M. Bezumie, otsutstvie tvoreniya [Madness, the Absence of Work]. Trans. by S. L. Fokina. In: Figury Tanatosa: Iskusstvo umiraniya [The Figures of Thanatos. The Art of Dying]. Eds. A. V. Demicheva, M. S. Uvarova. St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg University Publ., 1998, p. 203–211. (in Russ.) Kaley J. Failed Witnessing in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway. Woolf Stud-ies Annual, 2008, no. 14, p. 69–87. Karlsson M. Writing Madness: Deranged Impressions in Akutagawa’s “Cogwheels” and Strindberg’s Inferno. Comparative Literature Studies, 2009, vol. 46, no. 1, p. 618–644. Kuminova O. Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury as a Struggle for Ideal Communication. Literature Interpretation Theory, 2010, vol. 21, no 1, p. 41–60. Morrison G. M. The Composition of “The Sound and the Fury”. In: William Faulkner’s The sound and the fury. New Edition. Ed. by H. Bloom. Broomall, PA, Chelsea House Publications, 2008, p. 3–30. Ricoeur P. Vremya i rasskaz [Time and Narrative]. Trans. by T. V. Slavko. Moscow, St. Petersburg, Universitetskaya kniga Publ., 2000, vol. 2: The Configuration of Time in Fictional Narrative, 224 p. (in Russ.) Rose Ph. Woman of Letters: A Life of Virginia Woolf. London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1978, 298 p. William Faulkner: The Critical Heritage. Ed. by J. Bassett. London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1975, 422 p. Woolf V. Dnevnik pisatel’nitsy [A Writer’s Diary]. Trans. by L. I. Volodarskoy. Moscow, Tsentr knigi VGBIL im. M. I. Rudomino Publ., 2009, 480 p. (in Russ.) |
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