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“Unfathomable Calmness”: Betrayal Trauma, Silence and Dissociation in The Secret Agent

Publication date: 2021

Yearbook of Conrad Studies, 2019, Vol. 14, pp. 61 - 81

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843941YC.19.003.13229

Authors

Imen Chemengui
University of Tunis, Tunisia
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2839-4788 Orcid
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Titles

“Unfathomable Calmness”: Betrayal Trauma, Silence and Dissociation in The Secret Agent

Abstract

With the rise of trauma theory in late 19th century, researchers have focused on foregrounding the significance of some catastrophic events that pertain mainly to the collective, leaving other forms of trauma and their psychological aftermath on the individual underrepresented. In this paper, I focus on social traumas in Joseph Conrad’s The Secret Agent, which seems to be overlooked by some critics whose insights highlight primarily its political aspect. The events of the novel revolve around the peculiar and traumatic experience of Winnie Verloc whose life is rife with betrayal and violence. Her recurrent exposure to successive shocking events culminates in her dissociation and, consequently, her suicide. To pin down what lies beneath Winnie’s ambiguity, aloofness and silence in the novel, I mainly rely on trauma theory, drawing from studies on PTSD, betrayal and dissociation by several trauma scholars, such as, Cathy Caruth, Shoshana Felman, Jennifer Freyd, and others. Furthermore, this paper examines the inextricability of the past from the present in trauma through the breadth scrutiny of Winnie’s psychological response to her excruciating experience. Hence the way the appalling past returns unbidden to shake Winnie’s present.

References

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Information

Information: Yearbook of Conrad Studies, 2019, Vol. 14, pp. 61 - 81

Article type: Original article

Authors

https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2839-4788

Imen Chemengui
University of Tunis, Tunisia
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2839-4788 Orcid
All publications →

University of Tunis, Tunisia

Published at: 2021

Article status: Open

Licence: CC BY-NC-ND  licence icon

Percentage share of authors:

Imen Chemengui (Author) - 100%

Article corrections:

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Publication languages:

English