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Martin was in the jungle alone, and the sun was sinking’: The Weather, Culture and Identity in Virginia Woolf’s The Years

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dc.contributor.author Verita Sriratana
dc.date.accessioned 2017-01-24T02:30:35Z
dc.date.available 2017-01-24T02:30:35Z
dc.date.issued 2012
dc.identifier.citation Identities in Transition. 159–165 en_US
dc.identifier.isbn 978848880825
dc.identifier.uri http://cuir.car.chula.ac.th/handle/123456789/51532
dc.description.abstract Depictions of the weather as cultural representation in literature, particularly in Virginia Woolf’s The Years (1937), challenge the construction of meanings, identity, and culture. Basing my argument on Homi K. Bhabha’s concept of colonial ambivalence, I propose in this chapter that though the weather is often portrayed in our daily life as an essence, it is at the same time, portrayed as the very ‘thing’ which constantly escapes essentialisation and therefore, can be compared to an individual’s complex sense of self, sense of place, and sense of culture. There are numerous attempts to regulate the weather, as there are numerous attemps to regulate and pigeonhole one’s identity and mind-set. Endeavours of this kind are, according to Woolf, constantly challenged by the weather and the self’s dynamism and unpredictability. Also, the weather endows place with a sense of identity, as patial consciousness. Its very physicality contributes to the construction of an imagined community at both regional and national levels. However, in the text, the weather’s ambivalence and changeability, as reflected in human beings’ past and present obsessive attempts to control and rationalize it, shatter its very essence and challenge our fixed concepts of identity, sense of regionality and sense of nationhood
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Oxford: Inter-disciplinary Press, 2012 en_US
dc.rights School of English, University of St. Andrews, United Kingdom en_US
dc.rights ได้รับการอนุญาตให้เผยแพร่จากผู้เขียนบทความ ตามจดหมายอิเล็กทรอนิกส์
dc.subject Culture -- Virginia en_US
dc.title Martin was in the jungle alone, and the sun was sinking’: The Weather, Culture and Identity in Virginia Woolf’s The Years en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.email.advisor verita.s@chula.ac.th


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