Monday, August 19, 2019
The Intersection of External Time and Internal Time in Mrs Dalloway by
   In Mrs Dalloway, the modernist writer Virginia Woolf undermines the     usual conventions of prior prose fiction by adopting an innovative     approach to time. She contrasts the objective external time and     subjective internal time that structure the plot of the one-day novel.     In fact, the story takes place on a single day in June and, by the use     of two important techniques, namely the stream of consciousness mode     of narration and the interior monologue, the reader is constantly     flowing from the present to the past or the future. Moreover, Woolf     blurs the distinctions between dream and reality but emphasizes the     importance of the present moment. Finally, both representations of     time have a great influence on characters' life and relations between     each other.       Firstly, time itself, which, in fact, measures and divides, becomes     fluid, elastic and mobile the interaction of memories and thoughts. As     Showalter points out in the introduction of Mrs Dalloway, "In Time and     Free Will (1888) à ¢Ã¢â ¬Ã ¦ Bergson" speaks about "'psychological time, which     is internal, subjective, and measured by the relative intensity of the     moment'" (qtd. in Woolf xx). Internal time is one of the new     characteristics that Woolf introduces in her novel. In other words,     she describes a subjective reality through the stream of     consciousness. By this new mode of narration, Woolf gives to the     reader the impression of entering the consciousness of the characters.     It describes the unorganised flow of thoughts, sensations, and     memories that is the time in the mind (or internal time). Characters'     memories introduce the element of time. Furthermore, one of the     techniques for represen...              ...clusion, I would say that Woolf also found her own voice in Mrs     Dalloway. Indeed, in this novel, she has radically broken with the     traditional way of representing time. The intersection between     external and internal time structures very well the novel despite his     disordered and discontinued nature. In fact, Woolf has succeeded in     keeping unity throughout the story despite the constant moves between     the consciousnesses of every character. Moreover, by the use of the     new modern techniques, i.e. the stream of consciousness and the     interior monologues, she makes the novel seem more truthful.     Therefore, through this subjective approach to reality, the reader is     closer to the characters and s/he is easier absorbed in the new world     of fiction.       Bibliography       Woolf, Virginia. Mrs Dalloway. London: Penguin Classics, 2000.                        
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