Psychological Narrative in the Novel ‘Wilds of Fever’

Section: Research Paper
Published
Jun 1, 2023
Pages
90-100

Abstract

This research examines and analyses the psychological narrative in the novel (The Wilderness of Homeland) by Ibrahim Nasrallah, because of the importance of this tool in conveying events, as well as the writer's ability to employ it in a method that causes him getting into character of the novelist character in (Yatamaha) who is the narrator and knower of the hero character's psychological attitudes and. This makes it more human-related through its ability to dive into man's inner psyche, relying on an effective and influential context and studying human concerns, suffering and, psychological and physical conflicts. The impact of those conflicts on his life is driven serve human issues, which is the main tool that guides the narrative, and the process of building personalities in an attempt to alert to man's injustice, represented by the young teacher who has thrown the job into that remote part of the island, in which justice is absent and rights are usurped. So, the study came to highlight the psychological aspect of the characters. For it is difficult to isolate the dialogue from the other elements of the substantive work of description and dialogue. We found that the psychological narrative is achieved in the novel through the axis of psychological description, the monologue axis, and the soliloquy axis, without leaving a trace of fallacies, and to deal with events with vivid realism and high precision. Finally, the research ended with a conclusion of the most prominent results.

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How to Cite

Saleh Khalaf, M. (2023). Psychological Narrative in the Novel ‘Wilds of Fever’. Adab Al-Rafidayn, 53(93), 90–100. https://doi.org/10.33899/radab.2023.178496