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'Torture in the country of the mind', a study of suffering and self in the novels of Patrick White / Albert Pieter BrugmanBrugman, Albert Pieter January 1988 (has links)
This study is concerned with an evaluation of the suffering
and self of the elected characters in the novels of Patrick
White. The suffering these elected characters endure, apart
from the uncomprehending antagonism of society, takes place
mainly in the country of the mind - "that solitary land of
the individual experience, in which no fellow footfall is
ever heard" (Epigraph to The Aunt's Story) - and is a form
of catharsis in preparatory to a reunion with God as the
Source of all Being. The suffering, whether of a psychic or
physical nature - or both - is complicated by the duality
between the esoteric and exoteric selves of the characters
involved. The nature of the suffering is always solitary.
The wisdom eventually gained from the suffering cannot be
shared. Contact with fellow elect is brief and without consequence
except for mutual recongnition of "outsidership".
It is clear that the elected character has no apparent control
of what happens to him in life. The reader gains the
impression that the elected characters in White's novels are
the involuntary victims of some "malign" life-force that,
paradoxically, brings about a state of grace. White touches
on, but wisely prefers not to examine, the problems of
predestination and euthanasia.
The elected characters are all outsiders in the sense that
they are, in some psychic or physical manner, different from
the members of the society in which they find themselves.
In the earlier novels the elected characters' alienism is
characterised by their intuitive awareness of another, nonphysical,
transcendent plane of being - "There is another
world, but it is in this one" (Epigraph to The Solid
Mandala) . Progressive reading of White's novels reveals
that his conception of suffering, despite disavowal, is in
line with the Biblical concept of suffering as described in
Paul's letter to the Romans.
The non-elected members of society with whom the elect come
into conflict either do not understand or are unwilling to
admit their intuitive awareness that there is another world
within the familiar one, a concept White frequently refers
to in his image of boxes and boxes within boxes. The secret
knowledge the elect seem to have antagonises the other members
of society because of the sense of loss they experience.
White's later novels reveal a concern with sexually aberrated
suffering which is closely aligned to his own unhappiness.
The sexual duality that is an essential aspect of
Theodora Goodman's (The Aunt's Story) dilemma gains progressively
more of White's attention and is eventually exposed
in his biography of Eddie Twyborn (The Twyborn Affair).
White's concern with abnormal sexuality is related to his
disquiet with the mystery of the soul baing "housed” in a
body not only unsuitable, but also contrary to the nature of
the psyche which is either predominantly male or female.
White is clearly angry that this mystery should be the
profound result of momentary lust. Although so many of
White's elect labour under spiritually destructive burdens
of guilt, the parents who are considered the root cause of
all suffering in a post-lapsarian state, feel little of any
compunction because they are too concerned with their own
suffering, real or imagined.
God as Source or God as the "One" is an all-pervading, if
unacknowledged force in White's corpus and in the lives of
his elect. The elect turn to God only when they have suffered
and acknowledged their dependence on Him.
It is sad that White should, in the end not find himself in
"the boundless garden" with Stan Parker (The Tree of Man).
He seems to share the fates of Theodora Goodman (The Aunt's
Story) and Arthur Brown (The Solid Mandala). / Thesis (DLitt)--UOVS, 1989
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'Torture in the country of the mind', a study of suffering and self in the novels of Patrick White / Albert Pieter BrugmanBrugman, Albert Pieter January 1988 (has links)
This study is concerned with an evaluation of the suffering
and self of the elected characters in the novels of Patrick
White. The suffering these elected characters endure, apart
from the uncomprehending antagonism of society, takes place
mainly in the country of the mind - "that solitary land of
the individual experience, in which no fellow footfall is
ever heard" (Epigraph to The Aunt's Story) - and is a form
of catharsis in preparatory to a reunion with God as the
Source of all Being. The suffering, whether of a psychic or
physical nature - or both - is complicated by the duality
between the esoteric and exoteric selves of the characters
involved. The nature of the suffering is always solitary.
The wisdom eventually gained from the suffering cannot be
shared. Contact with fellow elect is brief and without consequence
except for mutual recongnition of "outsidership".
It is clear that the elected character has no apparent control
of what happens to him in life. The reader gains the
impression that the elected characters in White's novels are
the involuntary victims of some "malign" life-force that,
paradoxically, brings about a state of grace. White touches
on, but wisely prefers not to examine, the problems of
predestination and euthanasia.
The elected characters are all outsiders in the sense that
they are, in some psychic or physical manner, different from
the members of the society in which they find themselves.
In the earlier novels the elected characters' alienism is
characterised by their intuitive awareness of another, nonphysical,
transcendent plane of being - "There is another
world, but it is in this one" (Epigraph to The Solid
Mandala) . Progressive reading of White's novels reveals
that his conception of suffering, despite disavowal, is in
line with the Biblical concept of suffering as described in
Paul's letter to the Romans.
The non-elected members of society with whom the elect come
into conflict either do not understand or are unwilling to
admit their intuitive awareness that there is another world
within the familiar one, a concept White frequently refers
to in his image of boxes and boxes within boxes. The secret
knowledge the elect seem to have antagonises the other members
of society because of the sense of loss they experience.
White's later novels reveal a concern with sexually aberrated
suffering which is closely aligned to his own unhappiness.
The sexual duality that is an essential aspect of
Theodora Goodman's (The Aunt's Story) dilemma gains progressively
more of White's attention and is eventually exposed
in his biography of Eddie Twyborn (The Twyborn Affair).
White's concern with abnormal sexuality is related to his
disquiet with the mystery of the soul baing "housed” in a
body not only unsuitable, but also contrary to the nature of
the psyche which is either predominantly male or female.
White is clearly angry that this mystery should be the
profound result of momentary lust. Although so many of
White's elect labour under spiritually destructive burdens
of guilt, the parents who are considered the root cause of
all suffering in a post-lapsarian state, feel little of any
compunction because they are too concerned with their own
suffering, real or imagined.
God as Source or God as the "One" is an all-pervading, if
unacknowledged force in White's corpus and in the lives of
his elect. The elect turn to God only when they have suffered
and acknowledged their dependence on Him.
It is sad that White should, in the end not find himself in
"the boundless garden" with Stan Parker (The Tree of Man).
He seems to share the fates of Theodora Goodman (The Aunt's
Story) and Arthur Brown (The Solid Mandala). / Thesis (DLitt)--UOVS, 1989
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Four novels of Patrick WhiteBellette, Antony Frank January 1963 (has links)
The intention of this thesis is to remedy the lack of serious critical attention given to the Australian novelist Patrick White. In Australia critical reaction has been tepid if not openly hostile, while in Britain and America only a small number of critics have dissociated White from his regional background and endeavoured to place him in a wider context. It is the purpose of the thesis to define this context, and to demonstrate that White is a highly original novelist in his own right.
Of White's total output to the present time of six novels, only four are discussed here—The Aunt's Story (1948), The Tree of Man (1955), Voss (1957), and Riders in the Chariot (1961). As an introduction to these four novels the first chapter attempts to define White's place in the 'Australian tradition', to give an account of his local critical reception, and to discuss in brief the nature of his central preoccupations as an artist and the forms in which they are manifested.
An examination of the four novels reveals the development of White's thought from the time when his artistic maturity became fully evident. From The Aunt's Story to Riders in the Chariot White is concerned above all with the besetting problems of the present time: the dilemma of the individual when faced with the break-down of traditional modes of thought, the possibility of meaningful communication, the problem of identity in a world of inner and outer chaos, and the origin and nature of evil in the world.
From a subjective view of the world seen through the isolated consciousness of Theodora Goodman in The Aunt's Story, to the massive fourfold vision of Riders in the Chariot, White has demonstrated an ever-increasing range of tone and subject matter. He records with deadly accuracy the Australian 'comedy of manners', and in this respect he can be said to be the first genuine Australian satirist. At the other extreme, White is capable of rendering the profoundest mystical experience.
Whether satirist or mystic, or mere observer and recorder of the world around him, White has at his disposal a lucid and poetic style which, though often startling in its unorthodoxy, is capable of conveying and enlarging upon the subtlest nuance of thought and image. In his style, and in his broadness of vision, lie White's chief claims to excellence. This study of the four novels, in chronological order, endeavours to demonstrate that underlying them is a constantly expanding vision, and that Patrick White is a significant and powerful novelist, and worthy of the closest critical attention. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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The vision of alienation : an analytical approach to the works of Patrick WhiteSchermbrucker, William Gerald January 1966 (has links)
This study of Patrick White's work is chiefly concerned with the first four novels, but refers also to some poetry, the short stories, the plays and the three later novels. It traces the development of themes and techniques in these four novels in terms of artistic vision and the rendering of that vision.
The early, experimental works, up to The Living and the Dead are treated at considerable length, chiefly to show how the later developments are basically improvements and variations on the themes and techniques which have already been used. A second reason for the length of this part of the treatment is that, in the existing criticism of White, these early works are almost entirely ignored. There is need for reappraisal (over and above the original review articles which are about all that exist), and this study makes a modest attempt at this.
The middle period, to which belong The Aunt’s Story and The Tree of Man (as well as one play and some stories), is presented as the high point of maturity, both of technique and of the vision which the technique embodies. The works have a high degree of structural integration and the vision is presented with great clarity and imaginative appeal.
The later novels, Voss, Riders in the Chariot and The Solid Mandala, continue the use of developed techniques from the middle period. There is an imaginative boldness of design in these later novels, but the themes reveal a vision which appears to be declining into personal reverie and dream. In this period White seems to lose the ability to maintain the stance of integrity-in-isolation which he has asserted in the two preceding novels, and appears instead to seek some kind of mystic communion for his heroes.
These interpretations of the later novels are suggested, but not argued in his study; they have been argued in several published articles. In part, it is this discrepancy between the mystical or basically symbolic vision of the later novels and the un-symbolic, essentially naturalistic vision of the earlier period, which has defined the limitations of the thesis presented.
At the present stage of critical interpretation, the vision of the later period appears less significant than the earlier vision. In order that we may resolve the apparent differences between the two visions, it is necessary first to define the earlier vision. This study analyses the earlier works, for that purpose. In the final chapter, a suggestion is offered as to how the later novels might be approached in a way that would show the later vision to be a consistent development of the earlier vision, through a boldly symbolic technique.
Above all, this study concentrates on White's vision of the alienated state of man, as the central pre-occupation of his earlier works. It analyses the techniques by which this vision is rendered, examining the tests of the four novels more closely than has been done in any criticism published to date. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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The reign of the Mother Goddess : a Jungian study of the novels of Patrick White / by David J. TaceyTacey, David J. (David John), 1953- January 1981 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy) / xv, 439 leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of English, 1982
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Still life : the life of things in the fiction of Patrick WhiteWhaley, Susan Jane January 1987 (has links)
"Still Life" argues that Patrick White's fiction reveals objects in surprising, unexpected attitudes so as to challenge the process by which the mind usually connects with the world around it. In particular, White's novels disrupt readers' tacit assumptions about the lethargic nature of substance; this thesis traces how his fiction reaches beyond familiar linguistic and stylistic forms in order to reinvent humanity's generally passive perception of reality.
The first chapter outlines the historical context of ideas about the "object," tracing their development from the Bible through literary movements such as romanticism, symbolism, surrealism and modernism. Further, the chapter considers the nature of language and the relation of object to word in order to distinguish between the usual symbolic use made of objects in literature and White's treatment of things as discrete, palpable entities. The second chapter focuses on White's first three published novels—Happy Valley (1939), The Living and the Dead (1941) and The Aunt's Story (1948)--as steps in his novelistic growth. Chapters Three, Four and Five examine respectively The Tree of Man (1955), The Solid Mandala (1966) and The Eye of the Storm (1973); these novels represent successive stages of White's career and exemplify his different formal and stylistic techniques. White's innovations demand a new manner of reading; therefore, each novel is discussed in terms of objects which reflect the shapes of the works themselves: "tree" defines the structure and style of Tree of Man "house" inspires Solid Mandala and "body" shapes Eye of the Storm. Reading White's novels in terms of structural analogues not only illuminates his methodology, but also clarifies his distinction between objective and subjective ways of understanding the world. Further, these chapters also refute critics' arguments that White's objects are merely victims of his overambitious use of personification and pathetic fallacy, or that they are the result of his dabbling in mysticism.
"Still Life" concludes by showing how Patrick White's novels sequentially break down assumptions about reality and appearance until the reality of language itself falters. The author restores mystery to things by relocating the possibility of the extraordinary within the narrow, prescribed confines of the ordinary. White succeeds in changing readers' notions about the nature of reality by disrupting the habitual process by which they apprehend the world of things. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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Alternative mythical structures in the fiction of Patrick WhiteBosman, Brenda Evadne January 1990 (has links)
The texts in this study interrogate the dominant myths which have affected the constructs of identity and history in the white Australian socio-historical context. These myths are exposed by White as ideologically determined and as operating by processes of exclusion, repression and marginalisation. White challenges the autonomy of both European and Australian cultures, reveals the ideological complicity between them and adopts a critical approach to all Western cultural assumptions. As a post-colonial writer, White shares the need of both post-colonising and post-colonised groups for an identity established not in terms of the colonial power but in terms of themselves. As a dissident white male, he is a privileged member of the post- colonising group but one who rejects the dominant discourses as illegitimate and unlegitimating. He offers a re-writing of the myths underpinning colonial and post-colonising discourses which privileges their suppressed and repressed elements. His re-writings affect aboriginal men and women, white women and the 'privileged' white male whose subjection to social control is masked as unproblematic freedom. White's re-writing of myth enbraces the post-modern as well as the post- colonial. He not only deconstructs and demystifies the phallogocentric/ethnocentric order of things; he also attempts to avoid totalization by privileging indeterminacy, fragmentation, hybridization and those liminary states which defy articulation: the ecstatic, the abject, the unspeakable. He himself is denied authority in that his re-writings are presented as mere acts in the always provisional process of making interpretations. White acknowledges the problematics of both presentation and re-presentation - an unresolved tension between the post-colonial desire for self-definition and the post-modern decentring of all meaning and interpretation permeates his discourse. The close readings of the texts attempt, accordingly, to reflect varying oppositional strategies: those which seek to overturn hierarchies and expose power-relations and those which seek an idiom in which contemporary Australia may find its least distorted reflexion. Within this ideological context, the Lacanian thematics of the subject, and their re-writing by Kristeva, are linked with dialectical criticism in an attempt to reflect a strictly provisional process of (re) construction
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Transcendence in Patrick White: the imagery of the Tree of Man and VossVan Niekerk, Timothy January 2003 (has links)
This study represents an exploration of White's concept of transcendence in The Tree of Man and Voss by means of a detailed account of some of the key patterns of imagery deployed in these novels. White's imagery is a key mode of expression in his work, not simply manifesting in overarching religious symbols and framing structures but figuring in constantly modulated tropes continuous with the narrative, as well as in minor, but no less significant images occasionally susceptible to etymological or onomastic reading. While no attempt is made to provide an exhaustive exploration of the tropes at work in these novels, a sufficient range of material is covered, and its metaphoric density adequately penetrated, to highlight and explore a fundamental concern in White's work with a paradoxical unity underlying the dualities inherent in temporal existence. A useful way of approaching his fiction is to view the perpetual modulations of his imagery as the dramatisation of an enantiodromia or play of opposites, in which the conflicts of duality are elaborated and paradoxically - though typically only momentarily - resolved. This resolution or coincidence of opposites is a significant feature of his notion of transcendence as well as his depictions of illuminatory experience, and in this respect White's metaphysics share an essential characteristic, not only of Christianity, but a range of religious and mythological systems concerned with expressing a transcendent reality. Despite these analogies, however, the novels at hand are not so tightly bound to Christian, or any other, meaning-making systems so as to constitute sustained allegories, and hence this study does not aim to chart a series of correspondences between White's images and biblical or mythological symbols. Indeed, a criticism often levelled at White - with The Tree of Man and Voss typically figuring in support of this claim - is that he too rigidly imposes religious frameworks on his work. An extension of this view is formulated in the Jungian critique of White's corpus offered by David Tacey, who argues that White's conception of transcendence is consistently challenged by the archetypal significance of the images he employs, which point to a contrary process of psycho-spiritual regression in his protagonists. In a fundamentally text-based approach, this study explores White's use of imagery while taking biblical resonances and archetypal interpretations into account, and suggests that, though White's images are highly allusive, they are not merely agents of imported Christian, or other traditional symbolic values. Nor do they undermine the authenticity of his depiction of the spirituality of his protagonists, or obtrude on the fabric of the narrative. Instead, the range of his images are - though often ambivalent - integral to a network of mercurial tropes which articulate and constantly evaluate a notion of transcendence through inflections and oscillations rather than equations of meaning.
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An explication of the dual nature of narcissism in Patrick White's novel The solid mandalaWatts, Jacqueline Anne January 1989 (has links)
The focus of this thesis has been to engage in a hermeneutic dialogue with Patrick White's novel The solid mandala, to provide an explication of the dual nature of narcissistic wounding. To this end a brief review of Patrick White's novels is given, which traces a thematic development of the hero's strivings to attain wholeness and merger with an idealized image. This struggle is understood to reflect man's strivings to return to a state of omnipotent fusion with the maternal image, be it God, nature, the idealized other, or the self. Literature which reflects the dual nature of narcissistic wounding is reviewed, and the concept of narcissism is traced from the historical roots of Freud, to current understandings of the function and experience of narcissism. Emphasis is given to understanding the experiential nature of narcissistic wounding. As such it is implied that narcissism is a normal developmental component which requires the facilitation of containment and reflection for its transformation into appropriate adult functioning. The importance of the maternal environment is discussed, together with the various theoretical conceptualizations of the consequences of failure of the environment. The hermeneutic dialogue with the novel's description of the experiences of the twins, Waldo and Arthur provides the basis for an amplification of the experience of narcissistic wounding. This amplification is used as clinical material from which a number of psychoanalytic formulations are drawn. These formulations are supported by a number of clinical examples from the researcher's own practice. There appears to be evidence for the value of focusing on the dual nature of the experience of narcissistic wounding. This focus reveals two aspects of experience, a damaged, positive, libidinal aspect and a defensive, pathological destructive aspect. Amplification of these two aspects of experience contribute to further the understanding of the conflictual experience of narcissistic wounding, and suggest the necessity for such an understanding for effective therapeutic intervention
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Australian national identity/ies in transition in the fiction of Patrick WhiteUngari, Elena January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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