Universitat Jaume I. Escola de Doctorat
Programa de Doctorat en Llengües Aplicades, Literatura i Traducció
This dissertation explores the dimensions of trauma in William Faulkner’s most experimental body of work written between 1929 and 1932. Interrogating trauma as a thematic concern and a formal strategy, I devise a tripartite structure to synchronically analyze its psychological, social, and aesthetic manifestations in the novelist's major novels. Specifically, this interdisciplinary analysis foregrounds the psychological expressions of suffering in Faulkner’s protagonists; situates individual distress within institutional frameworks; and locates the novelist’s strategies close to the formal mechanisms structuring traumatization. In its conclusions, this project identifies a poetics of trauma in Faulkner’s fiction. My reading brings into focus the author’s psychological intuition and considers new motivations behind his formal experimentation. Ultimately, by approaching trauma as both a clinical and formal entity, I establish a continuum between polarized views of trauma as either a biological reality or an aesthetic construct.
William Faulkner; Trauma; North-American literature; Interdisciplinary analysis; Trauma studies
159.9 - Psychology; 81 - Linguistics and languages; 82 - Literature
Arts, humanitats i llengües
Doctorat internacional