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Saturday, 19 November 2016

Reflection of twentieth century in To The Light House


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Paper Name : The Modernist English Literature



Assignment Topic : Reflection of twentieth century in To The Light House


Name: Solanki Pintu V


Sem : 3


Roll No : 29


Enrollment No: PG15101037




Submitted to :

                    M.K. BHAVNAGAR UNIVERSITY
                              Department Of English



Reflection of twentieth century in To The Light House



  • INTRODUCTION

      To the light house is a 1927 novel by Virginia Woolf. The novel focuses on the Ramsays and their visits to the Isle of Skye in Scotland somewhere around 1910 and 1920.

To the Lighthouse”(1927) is a novel of childhood, a summer house, intellectual life and art. In which the passage of time is set by the consciousness of the characters rather than the big bong of a clock. The events of a single afternoon are narrated in over half the book, while the events of the following ten years are compressed in few pages. In the novel nothing happens actually; all the events take place in the characters’ minds.


  • Historical Background of the twentieth century:

             Every single age in the historical backdrop of English writing has some extraordinary characteristics that recognize it from all other, Pioneer or Twentieth century likewise had some checked components that separate it from past ages. The move from Victorian age to Advanced age was speedier forward and in reverse. Innovation best depicted as scholarly and creative period from the main portion of the twentieth century.

In the main portion of that fifty years of the twentieth century human race propelled speedier and in reverse than amid maybe fifty eras of before. Human race moved speedier in industrialization and creations of innovation, with the assistance of that society prompt to advance, and as a result of material development and logical improvement there was otherworldly relapse, human race debased in the matter of religion and deep sense of being.

The world war one and two, the writing that was delivered amid this time was an endeavor to consult over the injury of such broad enduring and the subject of force and pitilessness. The war additionally uncovered the delicate way of human presence. The whole writing of the twentieth century can, contaminate be perused as an endeavor to manage the disclosure of misery of the mettle and frailty of humankind notwithstanding war. It is additionally conceivable to contend that abstract methods like "continuous flow" in James Joyce and Virginia Woolf were reaction to the merciless way of substances of war. Writers and specialists looked to get away from the brutal substances of torment, devastation and mercilessness by holding into the psyche. Instead of investigating genuine, they liked to investigate the brain. (NAYAR)


SOME CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF TWENTIETH CENTURY LITERATURE



  • Art for life sake/ art for art sake
  • Growing interest in the poor and the working classes
  • Anxiety and Interrogation
  • Development In psychology and other science
  • Influence of Radio, Cinema and Television
  • Impact of two World Wars
  • High degree of complexity in structure of literature
  • An interest in subjectivity and the working of the human consciousness

  • Impact of 20th century in “To The Light House”


  • Impact of the war

      The period of Virginia Woolf’s life spanned the transition from the Victorian to the modern world. In the nineteenth century, the industrial revolution had made Britain the ‘factory to the world’ and solidified its economic power.

To The Lighthouse, along with Woolf’s two preceding novels Jacob’s Room and Mrs. Dalloway, emerges from the period of painful recovery from the war, and displays Woolf’s innovations in prose fiction. Most strikingly, the major events of the novel are contained in brief, condensed parentheses, while the day-to-day thoughts and memories of the characters expand to fill the surrounding pages. Although the novel is set on an island off the coast of Scotland, the house and surrounding landscape are closely based on St. Ives, Cornwall, where the Stephen family spent their summers until Virginia’s mother’s death in 1895. It has therefore often been read as one of Woolf’s most autobiographical novels.


  • Stream of consciousness



  • What is Stream of consciousness?

         Stream of consciousness was a phrase used by William James in his Principles of Psychology (1890) to describe the unbroken flow of perceptions, thoughts, and feelings in the waking mind.


      Stream of consciousness is the name applied specifically to a mode of narration that undertakes to reproduce, without a narrator's intervention, the full spectrum and continuous flow of a character's mental process, in which sense perceptions mingle with conscious and half-conscious thoughts, memories, expectations, feelings, and random associations.

      Virginia Woolf saws us a particular person in this novel not only through the Consciousness of the other persons. The Conventional novel did not express life adequately. She was of the opinion that life was a shower of ever failing atoms of experience, and not a narrative line. Life, she said, was a luminous halo, a semitransparent envelope surrounding us from the beginning of Consciousness to end.

Generation gap, family relationship and eluding parental guidance

       Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse that deals with the topic of how the characters establish relationships among them, and how they are many times unsuccessful. What this analysis will try to add is report how gender roles expectations play a crucial part in the inadequacy of character relationships in the novel. Also, to answer how these conflicts are resolved, or not resolved, in the novel.

        In the very few opening chapters you will realize this. There is continuous confrontation between old and new, whether it is Mrs. Ramsay’s traditional perception of life or it is Lily’s strong individualism there we can see a gap between old generation and the new generation. Virginia Woolf’s use of the stream of consciousness technique allow us to read what they think about each other, what old think about a new and new about old, for instance in the below passage is about what Lily thinks about the daily life of Mrs. Ramsay.


Growth of Science and Technology


        The 20th century was marked by bold scientific developments. Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution undermined an unquestioned faith in God that was, until that point, nearly universal while the rise of psycho analysis, a monument led by Sigmund Freud, introduced the idea of unconscious mind. Such innovation in ways of thinking had great influence on the styles and concerns of contemporary artist and writer like those of Bloomsbury Group. Bloomsbury name derived from a district of London in which its members lived, this group of writers, artists and philosophers emphasized on the nonconformity, aesthetic pleasure and intellectual freedom.

Indirect interior monologue


      Interior monologue, in dramatic and nonromantic fiction, narrative technique that exhibits the thoughts passing through the minds of the protagonists. These ideas may be either loosely related impressions approaching free association or more rationally structured sequences of thought and emotion.

    The term interior monologue is often used interchangeably with stream of consciousness. But while an interior monologue may mirror all the half thoughts, impressions, and associations that impinge upon the character’s consciousness, it may also be restricted to an organized presentation of that character’s rational thoughts.

     The first thing to note about this novel is that Woolf uses a specific form of the stream of consciousness technique called “indirect interior monologue.” “Interior” means that we are inside the consciousness of one character speaking to herself (“monologue”), thinking or remembering some past experience. Unlike “direct interior monologue” where the reader knows which character’s consciousness is being presented, the consciousness being explored in the “indirect” method of Woolf is not always obvious.

     Sometimes it’s one character’s consciousness, sometimes the narrative voice, sometimes another character’s consciousness, and often these are blended within one sentence without obvious signals being given as to the change of perspective.

  • REFRENCES

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