‘Walled-in’: The Psychology of the English Garden in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway

N. Boileau, Rebecca Welshman
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Abstract

Modernist writers are often considered to have moved away from ambivalent or even negative representations of the city – which Victorian writers had depicted as the antithesis to the Eden-like countryside – and shifted towards a celebration of city life. While Mrs Dalloway is celebrated for its city scenes, casual allusions to conversations ‘among the vegetables’ reveal an often overlooked subtext. For Woolf and for Cusk, the garden functions as a contained space through which to work through problematic emotions and achieve at least temporary reconciliation between the past and present. Rather than working within polarised conceptions of a paradise lost or regained, both authors experiment with the idea of a fragmented paradise that can be pieced together in sudden moments of self-realisation. The cultivated space of a domestic garden brings into focus the perception of being ‘walled-in’ (MD, 64) by emotional perceptions of past experiences. Self-consciousness that struggles to be articulated is realised with sudden clarity in heightened ‘moments of being’. Virginia Woolf and Rachel Cusk thus experiment with the trope of the garden in order to explore the depths of the self, beyond the urban spaces that have been so central in their writings.
“围墙”:弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫《达洛维夫人》中英国花园的心理学
现代主义作家通常被认为已经摆脱了对城市的矛盾甚至消极的描绘——维多利亚时代的作家把城市描绘成伊甸园般的乡村的对立面——转向了对城市生活的庆祝。虽然《达洛维夫人》以城市场景而闻名,但对“蔬菜间”对话的随意暗示揭示了一个经常被忽视的潜台词。对于伍尔夫和库斯克来说,花园的功能是作为一个封闭的空间,通过它来解决有问题的情绪,至少在过去和现在之间实现暂时的和解。两位作者都尝试了一个支离破碎的天堂的概念,而不是在失去或重新获得的两极分化的概念中工作,这个概念可以在突然的自我实现的时刻拼凑起来。家庭花园的栽培空间通过对过去经历的情感感知来关注被“隔离”的感知(MD, 64)。挣扎着表达的自我意识在高度的“存在时刻”突然清晰地实现了。弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫和蕾切尔·库斯克因此尝试了花园的比喻,以探索自我的深处,超越了他们作品中如此重要的城市空间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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