For the purpose of this project, the research is extremely technical. While it would be convenient to open up a search engine and type in "deconstruction of heteronormative behaviors in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway," or even something such as "feminism in Mrs. Dalloway," these will prove to not be fruitful. Though these methods may be useful in starting the research and data collection process, they are definitely not enough to create a solid thesis presentation without sounding like every other critical analysis that can be found with the use of a search engine for 20 minutes.
The biggest method for research that I will be using for collecting data for this thesis project will be something, simply put, like reading through a specific lens. When it comes to looking at the deconstruction of heteronormative behaviors in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, specific textual evidence will be focused on and unpacked throughout the process. I will be specifically looking at text that demonstrate a very certain set of gender roles throughout the story and how each one of those instances either supports, or discredits the current social constructs of the time in which the story is taking place. Specifically, I will be focusing on Septimus and how his mental health suffers due to his attempt to upkeep the perfect facade of masculinity.
In regards to the feminist reading of the novel, this will come from analysis of text that deals with gender roles, but specifically those of the women in the story. What do the women do with their time? Why are they important characters to keep in the story? Overall, how does each character challenge their assigned gender roles and how does that change our understanding of the story? Pieces of text that will be analyze are ones that simply "do not fit" the normal pattern of text.
Throughout the use of the two main areas of focus listed above, there will also be a study of feminist psychoanalysis and toxic masculinity. Once the first round of reading and research is complete, then the "minuscule" details will be brought into account to create an expansion of the idea of the importance of this piece of text in general. The importance of Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway comes from its challenging of both gender norms and basic psychoanalysis theories to open a conversation about the societal pressures both males and females face not only out in the public, but in their internal workings as well. This highlights the inherent need for a better understanding of not only physical, but also mental and emotional health.
▼
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Literature Review Draft 1
Conversations
Surrounding Virginia Woolf’s Mrs.
Dalloway
Brittney Dube
One
of the most obvious, but hardest issues to grapple with in literature comes
with the broad umbrella of the psychological discourse which we would love to
be able to ignore. When it comes to psychological analyses of literature, it
becomes important to understand the conversation occurring in the academic
world. This enhances not only our understanding of the literature, but also of
the world around us both in and out of the academic discourse. For the purpose
of a critical analysis of Mrs. Dalloway,
psychological analyses cannot be ignored – especially considering that one of
the main characters, Septimus, suffers from several different forms of
psychosis. In “Railed in by a Maddening Reason: Septimus Smith and His Role in
Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway,” Sabine
Sautter-Leger comments on Septimus by stating, “But the problem, again, is on
another level: Septimus thinks he
cannot feel – and this intellectual conception of himself as one who is
incapable of feeling underlies his psychosis,” (12-13). Leger makes this comment after pulling in
psychological analyses from both Sass and Lina Spoerl that diagnose Septimus
with a form of mental dysmorphia and/or schizophrenia. Leger continues to argue
the aspect of psychology that most people have an issue with determining: the
conflict between rationality and irrationality and the presence of intention. When
someone suffers from a mental illness, oftentimes people assign a certain set
of expectations for that one person. This becomes problematic because then
people face two sides of the same coin: one side if hat we do not want to
assign expectations to people with mental illnesses because they should be
treated as equals, but on the other side of the coin, a certain set of
expectations should be put into place if we are attempting to have realistic
expectations of a person that suffers from mental illnesses. Leger states,
If
we use Sass’s account of the condition, we have an alternative and provocative
way of understanding Septimus. Indeed, the aspect of Septimus linking him to
Sass’s version of the schizophrenic and which is essential to understanding his
character is that he insists, despite the anguish it paradoxically causes him
and alienation he feels as a result, on the necessity of taking a rational
approach to understanding his psychological state and the universe as a whole
(13)
The topic of psychological disorders and their
existence is one that most people shy away from when having a conversation.
This comes from the lack of exposure to truths and facts about the topic, and
the over-exposure to horrible assumptions that most people make about those who
suffer from the various disorders.
Another
issue facing the spectrum that Mrs.
Dalloway falls within is that of the presentation and reinforcement of
toxic masculinity. This reinforcement of toxic masculinity is not only
something on its own, but it is also something that stems out of the treatment
of psychological patients – especially those that were men. In “Feminism as
Aesthetic Vision: A Study of Virginia Woolf’s ‘Mrs. Dalloway,’” O. P. Sharma
focuses mostly on the women of the novel, but in one section, she comments on
the climate of the interrelationships of men within the novel, but also in a
worldly sense as well. She states,
Besides,
she is forces into a situation by his illness, where she has to confront the
insensible and mechanistic world of Dr. William Bradshaw and Dr. Holmes. In
them masculinity is further corrupted by the mechanical and fellingless
reaction to human life. Dr. Bradshaw harangues to the patients and their
relations, in moments of acute tension and affliction, upon the virtues of
“proportion” and “conversion” – and the eternal efficacy of a long “rest in
bed,” (Sharma 69).
Sadly, this is the common conversation when it comes
to discussing hetero-normative issues in literature from all decades and
genres. If the literature is not being outright with its overflow of support of
hetero-normative behaviors, then it must be something of the feminist category
that is bound and determined to replace the patriarchy with a matriarchy. This
assumption, however, is extremely problematic in the sense that the ultimate
goal of feminist literature is to either highlight the issues that women face,
or, highlight their right to independence. The notion that one system of power
can be replaced with another is severely flawed – especially if a person is to
expect that there would be any fundamental differences between the two power
systems other that the gender of the group running said system.
Regarding
the political climate of when Mrs.
Dalloway was published, and the climate of modern society that has the academic,
critical conversations about the novel, not much has changed over time. Readers
can see that the world that Septimus Smith and Mrs. Dalloway existed in is
highly like the world in which they are taking time away from to read the
novel. Mehmet Aslan comments on the climates of the two worlds in “A Different
Perspective on Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway.” Aslan comments, “Furthermore; moral
values, spiritual and psychological well-being of individuals were in great
depression as piled crowds were in search of a light to a benign world among
whom the hope for universal peace was rotting under the threat of a new world
war,” (8).
However, one can read the novel and
use the commonality and consistency of conversation to support an argument that
does not align with that of the novel or the general conversation surrounding
the novel. The larger importance here is that the conversation is open to
change and interpretation. If the conversation gets shut down by the elitists
involved, then that completely rejects the point of the conversation as a
whole. The importance of understanding not only the conversation, but the heart
of the text as well comes from the Universality of Truth regarding social and
political issues that many do not want to address. The importance of studying
the text is to see how, in a fairly practical way, a reader can deconstruct a
text (which can become practice for the future deconstruction of a society)
through the study of hetero-normative behaviors and representations, feminist
psychoanalyses, and toxic masculinity. This can then be translated into the
current climate that our society rests within to be used as a tool for teaching
the ability to reject systems of power and change social norms through the use
of conversational discourse and deconstruction.
References
Aslan, Mehment. ‘Hëna e Plotë’ Beder University. BJES. P 1-8.
SAUTTER-LÉGER, SABINE. Papers on Language &
Literature, Winter2017, Vol. 53 Issue 1, p3-31, 29p.
Sharma, O.P.. Women's Studies, Dec1975, Vol. 3 Issue 1,
p61, 13p.