Abstract

The present article sheds new light on trauma as a devastating phenomenon respecting the construction of male and female characters' identities and reveals reconstruction of male and female identities in Virginia Woolf's (1882-1941) The Waves (1931). Trauma is defined as an unexpected event that leaves the most terrible marks on the person's self, identity, psyche, emotions, beliefs, etc. Individual trauma is diagnosed by the male and female characters' horrendous responses regarded as post-traumatic stress disorder in terms of a distressing recollection of the traumatic occurrence. In contrast, cultural trauma, like patriarchy, gender, or sexual difference which has a horrific influence on cultures, can encompass traumatically the collective identity of male and female characters. In The Waves, the characters such as Rhoda, Jinny, and Susan get involved in the struggle for the self-definition relating to their collective and individual identities, respectively. No wonder, this article exploits an integrated method of feminism and psycho-trauma. It contextualizes the ideologies of postmodern feminist critics, such as Judith Butler (1956-), Helene Cixous (1937-), Cathy Caruth (1955-), and Luce Irigaray (1930-). Woolf, de facto, reveals how trauma as a catastrophe, either individual or collective, affects shockingly male and female characters' identities, so that their physical and psychological responses can be analyzed in terms of diagnosis of the trauma and its aftermath.

Highlights

  • The cultural trauma is one of the specific concepts of trauma related to collective memory identity, and to negative changes which may leave in its wake on the societal groups of the society

  • Cultural trauma, like patriarchy, gender, or sexual difference which has a horrific influence on cultures, can encompass traumatically the collective identity of male and female characters

  • Cultural trauma is the sort of trauma affects culture, that is, “cultural trauma in the culturally interpreted wound to cultural tissue itself” (Sztompka 458)

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Summary

Introduction

The cultural trauma is one of the specific concepts of trauma related to collective memory identity, and to negative changes which may leave in its wake on the societal groups of the society. These terms are used incorrectly and astonishingly interchangeably. At birth, it is to assign sex by the use of physical attributes. Gender signifies socially constructed roles based on biological sex. It can refer to the cultural expression of the sexed body. In this sense, the significance of gender is due to both social and cultural roles assigned to a person. Gender identity is characterized by the public expression of the gender role

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