No full text
Unpublished conference/Abstract (Scientific congresses and symposiums)
Going Mad From Pain in Caryl Phillips’s Fiction
Mascoli, Giulia
2015Altered States: Configuring Madness in Caribbean Literature
 

Files


Full Text
No document available.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
Caryl Phillips; Postcolonial; Literature; Madness; Cambridge; Crossing the River; Higher Ground
Abstract :
[en] This paper deals with Caryl Phillips, whose fiction gives a voice to those who were silenced by history: lonely, marginalized characters such as Caribbean female migrants or Christianized slaves trying to convert their own people. Tales of family disruption, displacement, dis-membering, dispossession, loss are at the heart of his work. No wonder therefore if many of his characters, regardless of their gender, location or the time that they live in, enter the “realm of madness” as an ultimate exit from the unbearable pain of their lives. My proposal is to concentrate on Leila from The Final Passage (1985), Irina from Higher Ground (1989), Emily from Cambridge (1991) and Martha from Crossing the River (1993). These characters are motherless, husbandless and except for Leila, childless. Their traumatizing experiences, including a miscarriage, the birth of a stillborn baby, separation because of slavery, lead these four women to lose touch with reality, the pain driving them literally “crazy”. However, except for Martha, their “insanity”, momentary or definitive, opens the way to the logos which is uttered even if it disrupts the normative, patriarchal/colonialist society. Society’s silencing of these characters goes together with its inclination to associate mental disturbance with the realm of sound: hearing voices, shouting, screaming, repeated utterance. This sonic tendency is mirrored in Phillips’s writing. During the characters’ hallucinations, some passages create an aural experience alluding to their trauma, as some structural units are repeated over and over again. My contention is that these narrative devices transfer the characters’ chaotic experience into the writing and create a sense of confusion in the reader which privileges immediate empathy.
Research center :
CEREP - Centre d'Enseignement et de Recherche en Études Postcoloniales - ULiège
Disciplines :
Literature
Author, co-author :
Mascoli, Giulia ;  Université de Liège > Département de langues et littératures modernes > Langue et linguistique anglaises modernes
Language :
English
Title :
Going Mad From Pain in Caryl Phillips’s Fiction
Publication date :
24 April 2015
Event name :
Altered States: Configuring Madness in Caribbean Literature
Event organizer :
ULg - Université de Liège
Event place :
Belgium
Event date :
23-24 avril 2015
Audience :
International
Available on ORBi :
since 03 September 2015

Statistics


Number of views
137 (11 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
0 (0 by ULiège)

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi