The All-Knowing Narrator's Mental Sanctuary

In the year 1946, German author Anna Seghers wrote her semi-autobiographical novella The Outing of the Dead Schoolgirls during her exile in Mexico (during 1941 to 1947). She had suffered from both physical and emotional traumas, having met with a car accident and having lost her mother while still i...

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Main Author: Yeo, Nicole Yew Min
Other Authors: Divya Victor
Format: Student Research Paper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/88749
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/44732
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-887492020-10-06T09:09:16Z The All-Knowing Narrator's Mental Sanctuary Yeo, Nicole Yew Min Divya Victor School of Humanities Trauma Sanctuary In the year 1946, German author Anna Seghers wrote her semi-autobiographical novella The Outing of the Dead Schoolgirls during her exile in Mexico (during 1941 to 1947). She had suffered from both physical and emotional traumas, having met with a car accident and having lost her mother while still in exile. This essay explores how Seghers’ use of childhood memory as a trope to work through trauma allows the protagonist a mental space that acts as a sanctuary to recover from trauma. The essay argues that Seghers attempts to reunite the protagonist with her mother but the plot disallows this anticipated trajectory. The protagonist’s failure to meet her mother demonstrates that a survivor (like Seghers) is unable to obtain closure, therefore causing them to repeatedly revisit the traumatic memory. The essay utilises the explanation of Dominick LaCapra, a trauma theorist and Holocaust historian, that the desire for a connection with the “dead intimates” causes trauma survivors to “invest” in the trauma memory by reliving and prolonging the experience as a “necessary commemoration or memorial” that the dead did not receive (23). These survivors are often provoked by their experiences of the war leaving the individual with recurring reminders of the dead and their memories of them. The desire to return to these memories and to commune with the dead complicates the process of working through the trauma that would enable victims to recover from their emotional and mental scars. 2018-05-02T04:40:08Z 2019-12-06T17:10:08Z 2018-05-02T04:40:08Z 2019-12-06T17:10:08Z 2018 Student Research Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10356/88749 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/44732 en © 2017 The Author(s). 15 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Trauma
Sanctuary
spellingShingle Trauma
Sanctuary
Yeo, Nicole Yew Min
The All-Knowing Narrator's Mental Sanctuary
description In the year 1946, German author Anna Seghers wrote her semi-autobiographical novella The Outing of the Dead Schoolgirls during her exile in Mexico (during 1941 to 1947). She had suffered from both physical and emotional traumas, having met with a car accident and having lost her mother while still in exile. This essay explores how Seghers’ use of childhood memory as a trope to work through trauma allows the protagonist a mental space that acts as a sanctuary to recover from trauma. The essay argues that Seghers attempts to reunite the protagonist with her mother but the plot disallows this anticipated trajectory. The protagonist’s failure to meet her mother demonstrates that a survivor (like Seghers) is unable to obtain closure, therefore causing them to repeatedly revisit the traumatic memory. The essay utilises the explanation of Dominick LaCapra, a trauma theorist and Holocaust historian, that the desire for a connection with the “dead intimates” causes trauma survivors to “invest” in the trauma memory by reliving and prolonging the experience as a “necessary commemoration or memorial” that the dead did not receive (23). These survivors are often provoked by their experiences of the war leaving the individual with recurring reminders of the dead and their memories of them. The desire to return to these memories and to commune with the dead complicates the process of working through the trauma that would enable victims to recover from their emotional and mental scars.
author2 Divya Victor
author_facet Divya Victor
Yeo, Nicole Yew Min
format Student Research Paper
author Yeo, Nicole Yew Min
author_sort Yeo, Nicole Yew Min
title The All-Knowing Narrator's Mental Sanctuary
title_short The All-Knowing Narrator's Mental Sanctuary
title_full The All-Knowing Narrator's Mental Sanctuary
title_fullStr The All-Knowing Narrator's Mental Sanctuary
title_full_unstemmed The All-Knowing Narrator's Mental Sanctuary
title_sort all-knowing narrator's mental sanctuary
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/88749
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/44732
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