Tuesday, August 20, 2019
The Unconscious Mind of Mrs. Drover in Bowenââ¬â¢s The Demon Lover :: Demon Lover Essays
The Unconscious Mind of Mrs. Drover in Bowenââ¬â¢s The Demon Lover To some degree, literature is analogous to the human mind: both literature and the thought systems of human beings operate on multifarious levels. The human mind functions both consciously and unconsciously; while the conscious exists superficially, the unconscious governs most human actions. The superficial level of literature is gleaned by rendering a literal interpretation of the words on the pages. Yet, a piece of literatureââ¬âlike the human mindââ¬âalso contains a recondite element that governs the actions contained within the work. Sigmund Freud suggested that ââ¬Å"like the iceberg, the human mind is structured so that its great weight and density lie beneath the surfaceâ⬠(Guerin et al. 127). Similarly, the ââ¬Å"great weight and densityâ⬠of Elizabeth Bowenââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"The Demon Loverâ⬠also lies beneath the surface. While a literal interpretation reduces the work to a simple yet disturbing ghost story, trenchant analysis reveals the inward pilgrimage of the protagonist, Kathleen Drover. Although it is unclear whether or not Mrs. Droverââ¬â¢s return to her house in London is a physical journey, it is, with certitude, a psychological one. Mrs. Droverââ¬â¢s journey is one into her battle-scarred psyche, damaged by her failure to achieve a balance between two opposing forcesââ¬âthe Id and Superego. The terms id and superego, along with ego, comprise Freudââ¬â¢s tripartite model. The id is the portion of the psyche that generates ââ¬Å"our instinctual physical, especially libidinal, desires. The id itself is often described as insatiable and pleasure seekingâ⬠and it does not consider the consequences or implications of its actions (Murfin and Ray 164). Conversely, the superego ââ¬Å"operates according to morality principal and serves primarily to protect society and us from the idâ⬠(Bressler 151). The ego is the ââ¬Å"rational governing agent of the psycheâ⬠¦the ego serves as intermediary between the world within and the world withoutâ⬠and it helps ââ¬Å"keep us healthy human beings by maintaining a balance between these two opposing forcesâ⬠(Guerin et al. 130-1). Externally, Mrs. Drover is described as a ââ¬Å"prosaicâ⬠woman whose normal expression was that of ââ¬Å"controlled worry, but of assentâ⬠(Bowen 661-2). She was a simple, ordinary womanââ¬âperhaps even a bit dullââ¬âwhose movements were ââ¬Å"circumscribed.â⬠Internally, Mrs.
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