Madness as Metaphysics: Schizophrenia and Narrative Fragmentation in Virginia Woolf’s the Waves
الباحث الأول:
Asst. Lect. Murtada Ali Hussein
الباحثين الآخرين:
Asst. Lect. zainalabdeen abd alrazaq shnain aljanabi
المجلة:
International Journal of Social Science and Human Research
تاريخ النشر:
15 مارس، 2025
مختصر البحث:
In The Waves (1931), written by Virginia Woolf, the conventional narrative coherence is replaced with a fractured, polyphonic framework. This is similar to the perceptual and ontological dislocations that patients who suffer from schizophrenia exper…
In The Waves (1931), written by Virginia Woolf, the conventional narrative coherence is replaced with a fractured, polyphonic framework. This is similar to the perceptual and ontological dislocations that patients who suffer from schizophrenia experience. The argument presented in this article is that Woolf's experimental form goes beyond the domain of basic stylistic innovation in order to investigate the ephemeral nature of reality, identity, and time. The paper makes this claim by using schizophrenia as a theoretical framework. Through the alignment of six protagonists' discontinuous soliloquies, Woolf reimagines the shattered consciousness that schizophrenics experience as a philosophical inquiry into reality. This is accomplished through the use of the word "shattered consciousness." The novel's narrative fragmentation, which is characterized by shifting identities, non-linear chronology, and linguistic collapse, is a reflection of the epistemological crisis that modernity is experiencing, which occurs when Cartesian certainty is drowned in existential doubt. This research offers a novel reading of The Waves, which is a pioneering combination of psychological and philosophical topics. It does so by pulling from modernist theory, psychoanalysis, and continental philosophy. One can observe how Woolf's characters, particularly Rhoda and Bernard, represent the chaotic collapse of individual boundaries that allows for a paradoxical merger with the cosmic "waves" of existence by carefully reading the text on a more in-depth level. By employing schizophrenia as a metaphor for the ontological disintegration of modernity, the study contends that Woolf's formal experimentation destroys the illusion of coherence in story and human awareness. Specifically, the study focuses on the phenomenon of schizophrenia.