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Title
You must believe in spring, and Subverting causality: repetition and readers in Muriel Spark's work Subverting causality: repetition and readers in Muriel Spark's work |
Full text
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38340 |
Date
2021 |
Author(s)
Mahmoud, Mohamed Sayed Tonsy; Tonsy Mahmoud, Mohamed Sayed |
Contributor(s)
Stack, Allyson; Jamieson, Alan |
Abstract
You Must Believe in Spring is a bildungsroman that follows three days of Shahed's life in
Egypt. Set in the near-future ' early 2030's ' it deals with themes of revolution, alienation
and privilege. Being a disciple of the national Sufi institute, and a swimmer representing the
Armed Forces, Shahed toes the line between the two major factions in Egypt. He traverses a
country under lockdown to find Nizam ' a revered Sufi sheikh ' who's been imprisoned.
Shahed is there to deliver him to an army barracks in the Sinai, where Nizam is meant to give
a sermon. Along with his official mission, Shahed is carrying a bottle of ethanol disguised as
drinking water that he's planning on using to self-immolate in the barracks to protest the
Armed Forces' continued oppression of people in the country.
On Shahed's journey, the issue of rebelliousness, and the effectiveness of it, becomes
increasingly muddled. His grandmother's mythologised stories of the 2011 Revolution fall
apart amidst the horrifying reality of life in the city and Nizam's prison. Once Shahed
delivers Nizam to the barracks, and finds himself close to fulfilling his plan, Nizam escapes,
leaving Shahed alone, grappling for both life and freedom. Besides being a tale of one
person's idea of revolt, this manuscript deals with how people portray their narratives to
reach their own personal ends. - This research discusses the role of repetition in the interaction between text and reader in the
cases of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie and The Driver's Seat. In both texts the interaction is
invoked through Spark's use of repetition throughout the narrative. Spark produces a state of
constant return to various spaces in the narrative that function as narrative anchors. This
constant repetition of spaces ' as defined by Michel de Certeau in Spatial Stories ' allows
Spark to subvert traditional narrative forms, and challenge the issue of causality within the
chosen works. Both works handle the issue of repetition in a way that's directly influenced by
the content of the narrative. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie relies on the repetition of words,
while The Driver's Seat relies on relational aspects between words that goes beyond the
semantic structure, which Wolfgang Iser discusses in The Phenomenology of Reading. There
have been previous attempts to derive a definitive Cartesian structure for Spark's narratives,
but the temporal complexity of both novels make such efforts impossible. Cartesian closed form structural analyses of the narratives neglect the fact that any semblance of structure is
only implied for works of fiction. The reader constructs the framework through the reading
process. The narrative anchors that turns narrative units and places into spaces allow the
reader to orient themselves and measure the changes that have occurred in the narrative,
without compromising the subversive aspect of the novels' style. Iser's theories on
phenomenology, repetition, absences in texts elaborate on the relationship between the text and
the reader. Repetition cements the 'virtual reality' of the narrative, which allows the reader to
inhabit the text and witness the changes the spaces experience when exploring the narrative,
resulting in a constantly evolving narrative structure. |
Subject(s)
Egypt; Arab Spring; revolution; Muriel Spark; post-structuralism; Wolfgang Iser; Michel de Certeau; speculative-fiction; authoritarianism; Gilles Deleuze |
Language
en |
Publisher
The University of Edinburgh |
Type of publication
Thesis or Dissertation; Doctoral; PhD Doctor of Philosophy |
Format
application/pdf |
Repository
Edinburgh - University of Edinburgh
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Added to C-A: 2021-12-13;10:27:13 |
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