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Journal articles on the topic 'Fragmented psyche'

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1

Prathimashri, P., and Dr B. Balaji. "Fragmented Identity and the Search for Self: An Exploration of Adrienne Kennedy's "Funnyhouse of a Negro"." International Journal of English Language, Education and Literature Studies (IJEEL) 3, no. 6 (2024): 44–46. https://doi.org/10.22161/ijeel.3.6.8.

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Adrienne Kennedy's seminal one-act play "Funnyhouse of a Negro" (1964) delves into the complexities of identity, race, and mental fragmentation. Through the protagonist's, Sarah's, surreal and nightmarish world, Kennedy exposes the destructive nature of internalized racism and the fragmented self. This play navigates the tensions between blackness and whiteness, ancestral heritage and cultural disconnection, and the blurring of reality and fantasy. Through Sarah's fractured psyche, Kennedy masterfully critiques the societal pressures that perpetuate self-hatred and disconnection from one's cul
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Korir, Millicent Jemutai, Mark Chetambe, and Justus Makokha. "Shifting Identities and Fragmented Subjectivities in Majok Tulba’s Beneath the Darkening Sky and Emmanuel Dongala’s Johnny Mad Dog." East African Journal of Arts and Social Sciences 6, no. 2 (2023): 69–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.37284/eajass.6.2.1399.

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This paper examines the shifting identities of child characters and their fragmented subjectivities as represented in Majok Tulba’s Beneath the Darkening Sky and Emmanuel Dongala’s Johnny Mad Dog. The paper’s central premise is to examine how the two authors employ character mutation to construct shifting identities in the two texts. The paper employs the tenets of Carl Jung, which include the archetypes (shadow, animus, and persona) and forms of rebirth. Particularly subjective transformation (diminution of personality, identification with a group, and natural transformation). Sigmund Freud’s
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Al – Mahfood, Abdulrahman Dhyeyaa Nori, and N. Solomon Benny. "Trauma, Guilt, and the Fragmented Psyche: The Psychological Impact of the Iraq War on American Soldier." International Journal of English Language, Education and Literature Studies (IJEEL) 4, no. 2 (2025): 21–28. https://doi.org/10.22161/ijeel.4.2.4.

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This paper seeks to investigate the psychological effects of the Iraq War on the American soldier through a literary analysis of Kevin Powers’ novel, The Yellow Birds. Adopting the psychoanalytical approach that has roots in literature, specifically the theories of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan, this study dwells on the main themes of trauma, guilt, suppression, and psyche fragmentation. That is to say, the protagonist John Bartle, who is the mouthpiece of the novelist Powers, stands as a case study to trace post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and moral wounds, revealing the deep psycholog
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Kanar, Othman Omer Salihi. "Altered State Of Consciousness As A Narrative Tool İn Dennis Lehane's Shutter Island." International Journal of Social Science and Human Research 07, no. 05 (2024): 3455–62. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11420919.

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This article delves into Dennis Lehane’s Shutter Island(2003) and its challenge to the conventional notion of a unified humanist self, proposing instead that the post-war self is inherently fragmented. It particularly scrutinizes this fragmentation through the experiences of a traumatized character in the novel, illustrating how severe wartime and post-war events disrupt and fracture individuals. Furthermore, it examines the role of storytelling and narration as essential tools for trauma survivors to navigate and reconcile the shattered aspects of their identities. Through storytelling,
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Nandy, Srija. "Existence in Limbo and the Post-War Psyche: Absurdism and Alienation across Cultures." International Journal of Language, Literature and Culture 5, no. 2 (2025): 43–50. https://doi.org/10.22161/ijllc.5.2.6.

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This paper explores the role of absurdism in post-war theatre through a comparative study of Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, Harold Pinter’s The Birthday Party, and Badal Sircar’s Evam Indrajit. Written in the aftermath of the Second World War, these plays reflect themes of confusion, alienation, and the search for meaning in a world that often appears purposeless. They move away from traditional storytelling and use fragmented plots, cryptic dialogue, and surreal settings to express the emotional emptiness of modern life. Despite their different cultural and geographical contexts, the pla
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Likha, Caral, and Ipshita Nath Dr. "Shell Shock to Suicide: A Closer Examined Perspective on the War-Induced Psychological Journey of Septimus Smith's Post-war Trauma." Criterion: An International Journal in English 16, no. 2 (2025): 964–80. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15320843.

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This research examines how Virginia Woolf&rsquo;s <em>Mrs Dalloway</em> depicts psychological traumas caused by war through the character of Septimus Smith and his experience of &ldquo;shell shock&rdquo;. Although the novel predates modern diagnostic criteria for PTSD, it presents a compelling image of the lasting impact of combat trauma on the human mind. Through a close textual study of Woolf&rsquo;s stream of consciousness narrative, this work analyses Septimus&rsquo;s fragmented psyche, marked by intrusive flashbacks, hyperalertness, and social withdrawal. Informed by historical and psycho
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Tamilmani, Kulamangalam Thiagarajan, and Rathinasamy Nagalakshmi. "Dismemberment of Kathleen’s Psyche in Joyce Carol Oates’s 'The Rise of Life on Earth'." English Studies at NBU 7, no. 2 (2021): 227–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.33919/esnbu.21.2.6.

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Postmodern literary texts have been exploring characters that are whimsically strange. The tacit plots in the postmodern textual space enable the writers to construct and manifest the mental space of the characters in the textual world. The Rise of Life on Earth written by Joyce Carol Oates concocts the emotional estrangement of the protagonist, Kathleen Hennessy. Decrypting the text amplifies the unabating efforts of Kathleen to survive in a world that has been portrayed as a larger, repressive and pernicious family. Her masquerade to be a shy, passive and well-behaved girl hides the menacing
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Bani-Khair, Baker, Ziyad Khalifah Alkhalifah, Mohammad Hilmi Al Ahmad, Majed Abdul Karim, and Mahmoud Ali Rababah. "The Correlation Between Art and Death in Willa Cather's Lucy Gayheart: Fatality of Art or Artistic Failure." Journal of Language Teaching and Research 15, no. 1 (2023): 318–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.17507/jltr.1501.35.

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This study explores the representation of art in Willa Cather's Lucy Gayheart (1935), which is viewed as an essential aspect of the novel in terms of its vitality and dominance. The novel subtly yet persistently invokes new possibilities for general human behavior and supportive interconnectedness among women. As the female experience looms large in Cather's fiction, Lucy Gayheart illustrates the dangers of presenting women in a romanticized, ethereal light. However, the present paper intends to prove that Cather's attempt at romanticizing her heroine's stance leads to a war between artistic a
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Kanar, Othman Omer Salihi. "The Narrative of Trauma in Art spiegelman's Maus." International Journal of Social Science and Human Research 07, no. 03 (2024): 1864–76. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10816048.

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This article explores how Art Spiegelman&rsquo;s Maus (1986-1991) challenges the humanist concept of the unified self, proposing instead that the post-war self is fragmented and split. This fragmentation is particularly examined through the lens of Holocaust survivors in Maus, showcasing how extreme experiences during and after the Second World War cause the self to fracture and even disintegrate. The article argues that storytelling and narration serve as a crucial tool for the trauma survivors to navigate and reconcile the fractured aspects of their self. Through storytelling, the protagonis
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Yong, Walters Ncham. "Fragmented psyche and postcolonial feminist construction: A study of Emeka Nwabueze’s The dragon’s funeral and tess Onwueme’s Then she said it." Journal of Languages, Linguistics and Literary Studies 2, no. 1 (2022): 9–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.57040/jllls.v2i1.136.

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This paper focuses on memory fragmentation as a result of gender relations between sexes that leads to trauma. A reading of Emeka Nwabueze’s The Dragon’s Funeral and Tess Onwueme’s Then She Said It reveals that patriarchy plays a negative role on both male and female genders and this places the study to hinge on the assumption that the dramatic world of Nwabueze and Onwueme is a patriarchal constructed society where both male and female genders suffer marginalization and look forward for liberation. This brings to focus the fragmentation of the psyches of both genders as a result of the trauma
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George, Kevin. "Lost in Lost Highway: A Psychoanalytic Reading of Lynch’s Lost Highway." Saudi Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences 9, no. 11 (2024): 339–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.36348/sjhss.2024.v09i11.001.

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This review article provides a thorough psychoanalytic exploration of David Lynch's Lost Highway, a film celebrated for its intricate narrative and surreal imagery. Utilizing Freudian and Lacanian theories, the analysis investigates the film's themes of identity, trauma, and the unconscious. The protagonist's disjointed journey through fragmented realities serves as a case study in the manifestation of repressed desires and fears. By examining the interplay of memory, perception, and selfhood, this article reveals the deeper psychological currents that drive the narrative and influence charact
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Saad Hameed and Husna Iqbal. "Psychological Scars of Exile in Diaspora: Investigating PTSD in the Protagonist Hassan in Abdulrazaq Gurnah novel “Memories of Departure”." Social Science Review Archives 3, no. 1 (2025): 1071–85. https://doi.org/10.70670/sra.v3i1.396.

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This paper attempts to analyze the psychological scars of exile on the protagonist: Hassan, in Abdulrazaq Gurnah’s masterpiece novel “Memories of Departure”. The divergent manifestations of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in the migrant experience is central to the investigation of this research endeavor. In the novel, the trauma of Hassan results from his forced displacement from Zanzibar. The perplexed and multifaceted trauma of the protagonist is analyzed through his dissociation, emotional numbness, and the reccuring painful memories, which are emblematical of PTSD. The fragmented na
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Kallio, Eeva. "From causal thinking to wisdom and spirituality: some perspectives on a growing research field in adult (cognitive) development." Approaching Religion 5, no. 2 (2015): 27–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.30664/ar.67572.

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This article concentrates on the latest international trends in the research on psychological development of adults, and especially on the development of cognition. The field of research has been very fragmented, and researchers have kept creating new models one after another to describe their own lines of thought and also seeking for empirical evidence for their models. This has created a rather equivocal picture of the phenomenon itself. The present article attempts to identify the historical roots of the field, and introduces descriptive factors that could conceptually determine the gist of
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14

Anuradha, S., and L. M. Swarnalatha. "The Search for Salvation through T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land." BL College Journal 5, no. 2 (2023): 115–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.62106/blc2023v5i2e12.

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T. S. Eliot’s poem ‘The Waste Land’ delves into the theme of self-reflexivity, portraying the lives of individuals alienated and isolated due to World War I. Many suffered from paranoia, leading lives devoid of purpose. The poem paints a vivid picture of the social characteristics of people in London during this period. T. S. Eliot, influenced by Indian philosophy, drew references from Hindu texts, offering a glimmer of hope. It suggests persevering through life with compassion, extending charity, and mastering inner thoughts to attain inner peace. This philosophy is captured in the resonant w
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15

Fernández, Pedro Jesus, and Sandra Helena Prudêncio. "The Relationship of Culture and Values to Performance and Effectiveness: A Case Study of Fragmented Organizational Culture." Journal of Management World 2022, no. 4 (2022): 265–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.53935/jomw.v2022i4.215.

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The importance of research on value and attitudes related to work is obvious, since values play a central role in determining the compatibility of individuals and employment organizations. Recognizing the importance of this issue, the paper emphasizes the importance of individual and organizational values for organizations, their potential to be part of strategic planning, and the goals of all responsible managers. The purpose of this study was to analyze the cultural agreement among an organization's subcultures, identifying the values perceived by its leadership and staff clusters. A case st
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Fatima, Rida, Momal Zafar, Mamoona Rafique, and Zahra Ibrahim. "The Puzzle of the Unflinching Civilians: Resilience, Resistance, or Resignation? Understanding Pakistan's National Psyche Amid Protracted Conflict." International Journal of Qualitative Research 5, no. 1 (2025): 85–96. https://doi.org/10.47540/ijqr.v5i1.2058.

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Pakistan is a battle-hardened nation, surviving decades of armed conflict, wars, terrorism, Martial laws, and internal political instability. The current paper explores the collective psychological and sociocultural responses of Pakistani civilians to prolonged exposure to conflict and violence. This study employed a thematic and comparative analysis of 46 peer-reviewed articles, media reports, and conflict studies from Pakistan and similarly affected regions, including Colombia, Afghanistan, Uganda, Syria, and Palestine. Through this lens, six themes emerged: normalization of violence, cultur
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17

McAlister, Sean. "‘The explosive devices of memory’: trauma and the construction of identity in narrative." Language and Literature: International Journal of Stylistics 15, no. 1 (2006): 91–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0963947006060557.

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This article attempts to show how a cognitive approach to textual analysis can function alongside other critical methodologies. Helen Weinzweig's novel Basic Black with Pearlsis an examination of the effects of trauma on the psyche, and in particular on its construction and maintenance of a sense of identity. As Shirley, the novel's narrator, struggles to locate the various aspects of her own identity, so too is the reader forced to experience this struggle in the act of attempting to construct for Shirley an identity out of her fragmented and discontinuous narrative. I approach this interpret
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18

Ms., P. M. Sindhu Bhavani. "Trauma in Domestic Spaces: A Study of Tahmima Anam's A Golden Age." International Journal of Advance Study and Research Work 5, no. 11 (2022): 14–18. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7414790.

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<strong><em>This research explores Tahmima Anam&rsquo;s novel A Golden Age from the perspective of psychological trauma. This novel vividly depicts the incidents of the Bangladesh War of Independence from March 1971 to December 1971. Anam presents the impact of the civil conflict on women who were confined to their domestic spaces. It focuses on the permanent psychological fragmentation experienced by the female characters from the sidelines in a warzone. Through the lens of the trauma model, the association between war trauma and memory is analysed in depth. The main characteristics of war tr
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19

Farooqui, Rummana. "Fragmented narrative techniques in Katherine Mansfield’s short fiction -the daughters of the late colonel as a reflection of psychological and emotional turmoil of the pinner sisters." Journal of Contemporary Research in Social Sciences 7, no. 1 (2025): 17–22. https://doi.org/10.55214/26410249.v7i1.6136.

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The purpose of this study is to explore the use of fragmentation in Katherine Mansfield's short fiction, "The Daughters of the Late Colonel," to illustrate the emotional as well as the psychological trauma of the Pinner sisters, torn apart by the death of their father and their conflicting desires. In literature, fragmentation may serve as a tool for psychological exploration, depicting characters’ fragmented thoughts and emotions to mirror the intricacies of the human psyche. In this short fiction, the narrative shifts between past and present, capturing the way memories surface and retreat i
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Chandan, Surabhi. "Quilted Selves and Shadowed Psyches: A Psychoanalytic Study of Grace Marks." Journal of Humanities and Education Development 7, no. 2 (2025): 30–35. https://doi.org/10.22161/jhed.7.2.4.

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This paper examines Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace through Freudian and post-Freudian psychoanalytic frameworks, focusing on the psychological complexity of Grace Marks, a historical figure convicted of murder in 19th-century Canada. The novel’s fragmented narrative, recurring motifs, and symbolic textures create a rich terrain for exploring themes of repression, trauma, and identity. Grace’s disjointed memory and ambiguous role in the murders are interpreted as signs of deep psychological distress, particularly tied to the repression of sexual trauma and loss. Drawing from Freud’s concepts of
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21

R.L, Megha, and R. Selvi. "Memory as a Conduit for Trauma and Healing: A Psychoanalytic Study in Anuradha Roy’s the Folded Earth." Shanlax International Journal of Arts, Science and Humanities 12, S1 (2024): 97–100. https://doi.org/10.34293/sijash.v12is1.8346.

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Trauma memories often have a powerful impact in causing psychological and emotional distress, recollection of those haunting events is unlike usual remembrances, they are more intrusive, fragmented and vivid to process for an individual. Those preserved memories in the unconscious mind can profoundly get triggered when an individual encounters a similar traumatic environment or event even after a long period. The purpose of the study is to explore how memories can be both a source of grief and a lane towards healing in Anuradha Roy’s novel The Folded Earth. The study uses a qualitative textual
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22

Islam, Rafiqul. "PSYCHOLOGICAL STRUGGLES AND INTERNAL CONFLICTS IN SONS AND LOVERS, MRS DALLOWAY, AND A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN." UC Journal: ELT, Linguistics and Literature Journal 6, no. 1 (2025): 22–35. https://doi.org/10.24071/uc.v6i1.12000.

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A broader transformation took place in the literary fields, mostly in terms of the protagonists' internal conflicts and psychological issues in the 20th century, which can be clearly seen in the works of prominent writers like D. H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, and James Joyce. This research article explores the psychological issues and internal conflicts of the protagonists of Sons and Lovers, Mrs. Dalloway, and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. The main characters of these novels suffer from extreme identity and existential crises. Employing Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalytic framework
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23

Omar, Rosli, and Vivian Soon. "RUGS Biodiversity Survey: Butterflies of Klang Valley." Malayan Nature Journall 76, no. 4 (2024): 487–504. https://doi.org/10.62613/mnj.24764.07.

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A baseline biodiversity survey has been conducted between July to September 2023 under the Rantaian Urban Green Spaces (RUGS) project. The biodiversity survey was carried out along the Damansara-Pantai Arc to Federal Hill region in Klang Valley of Peninsular Malaysia, to establish a baseline data for flora and fauna – butterflies, reptiles, amphibians, birds and mammals – for the green spaces within it. The 15 study sites include Kota Damansara Community Forest, Kwasa Damansara, Bukit Lanjan, Kampung Sungai Penchala, Bukit Sri Bintang, Bukit Kiara North, Bukit Kiara, INTAN, Rimba Ilmu Botanic
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24

Adhikari, Chulendra. "City Consciousness from Colonial Calcutta in Bal Krishna Sama’s Mukunda Indira." NPRC Journal of Multidisciplinary Research 2, no. 7 (2025): 5–14. https://doi.org/10.3126/nprcjmr.v2i7.81489.

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Background: Bal Krishna Sama's Mukunda Indira (1937) scrutinizes the interplay between the urban modernity of colonial Calcutta and the formation of Mukunda’s metropolitan consciousness. This paper focuses on Mukunda's psychological and cultural shift that profoundly contributes to Mukunda's emotional detachment from deep-rooted cultural heritage in the Indian metropolis of colonial Calcutta, which functions as a fractured space in stark contrast to Kathmandu which serves as a space for traditional sociocultural resistance. Methods: This study draws on qualitative and analytical data pooled fr
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Martínez-Raguso, Michael. "Fantasies of Erasure: A New Reading of Luisa Valenzuela’s "Cambio de armas"." Letras Femeninas 41, no. 2 (2015): 67–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/44735031.

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Abstract "Cambio de armas," Luisa Valenzuela much anthologized story, has been read as an allegory of the Argentine’s last military dictatorship and its grip on the nation’s psyche as well as bodies. In this essay, Martínez-Raguso proposes that the story is narrated from the perspective of a desaparecida whose memory has been erased, or is under erasure, by the military officer she had attempted to assassinate. Now in full control of the situation, the officer who was once her target wants to prove that he can fully reform (and re-form) the young and attractive former subversive before the dic
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Novroth, Ana. "In Search of the &quot;Other&quot; into the Night: A Study of the Double in a Polyphonic Perspective." International Journal of Literature and Arts 12, no. 3 (2024): 52–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.11648/j.ijla.20241203.13.

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From the perspective of psychology, the individual becomes conscious of or rethinks about themselves in the relationship with their double, represented artistically through conflicts that constitute the human psyche. From the perspective of the philosophy of language, especially the Russian scholar Mikhail Bakhtin, the double consists of the fear of others, that is, the image others make of the subject. Whichever the perspective adopted is, the literary work, as it represents the man and his world, provides an effective means of understanding the subject’s conflicts and existential and identit
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27

Alam, Syed Aftab. "UNRAVELING THE SYMBOLIC CHAINS: A LACANIAN EXPLORATION OF ANTOINETTE COSWAY'S CHARACTER IN JEAN RHYS'S WIDE SARGASSO SEA (1966)." International Journal of Academic Research for Humanities 4, no. 2 (2024): 20–30. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11216913.

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&nbsp; This research study aims to analyze the character of Antoinette Cosway, portrayed in the novel Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), employing the psychoanalytic theory of Jacques Lacan having a particular focus on the concept of Symbolic Order. This study employs qualitative content analysis as a research tool while Lacanian Symbolic Order is a theoretical framework. This novel portrays a great variety of characters. It focuses on the analysis of the character of Antoinette Cosway in Jean Rhys's novel Wide Sargasso Sea (1966). Judgmental sampling has been used for the selection of the population a
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Solovyova, Kristina. "Teenage Suicide as a Reflection of the Realities of the Modern Information Society." Ideas and Ideals 13, no. 2-2 (2021): 458–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.17212/2075-0862-2021-13.2.2-458-469.

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The article presents the actual problem of teenagers’ suicides as a reflection of the realities of the modern information society. The research methodology was made up of a general scientific method, namely the analysis of scientific literature on the research topic, as well as methods of statistical data analysis, which made it possible to prove that the modern information society increases the threats in the field of adolescent suicide. As a result of the analysis, it was revealed that the individual psychological characteristics of children and teenagers affect the formation of their propen
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Muhammad Shadab Ilyas. "A Cognitive Analysis of Frantz Fanon’s <i>Black Skin, White Masks</i>." Creative Saplings 3, no. 11 (2024): 1–19. https://doi.org/10.56062/gtrs.2024.3.11.800.

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Frantz Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks (1952) presents a radical cognitive analysis of how colonialism disturbs the psyche, leading to alienation as much from one’s own identity as from others. Through the lens of psychoanalytic theory and concepts of cognitive psychology, Fanon examines how the colonized individual internalizes racial stereotypes and constructs fragmented identities in a colonial system where whiteness is the standard to which society adheres. The epidermal (or skin color)ization of inferiority, an important tenet in Fanon’s argument, helps to make sense of how certain schema
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M.O., Dogan. "VISUALIZATION OF THE TRAUMA NARRATIVE IN JONATHAN SAFRAN FOER'S NOVEL EXTREMELY LOUD AND INCREDIBLY CLOSE." Наукові записки Харківського національного педагогічного університету ім. Г. С. Сковороди "Літературознавство" 2, no. 88 (2018): 43–59. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1490165.

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The article studies Jonathan Safran Foer&rsquo;s second novel Extremely Loud and Incredibly Closewithin the theory of trauma narrative. The novel describes the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Centre in New York, but the events of the day are never explicitly reported. Instead, numerous photographs and other visual elements are included in the text to represent the limits of language in portraying trauma r documenting its effects. It is argued that, because of the symbolical and literal inapproachability of the past and the unspeakability of the trauma, Foer&rsquo;s ch
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Udhayakumar, S. "Desolate Horizons: Nature and Isolation in Cormac Mccarthy’s The Road." Shanlax International Journal of English 13, no. 1 (2024): 69–73. https://doi.org/10.34293/english.v13i1.8212.

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McCarthy’s The Road intricately intertwines environment and alienation, crafting a narrative where desolation becomes both a physical and psychological landscape. The novel presents a father and son journeying through a post-apocalyptic world where the remnants of civilization are buried under layers of ash, decay and death. The barren, bleak landscapes are rendered with haunting portrayal, serving not only as a setting but as an omnipresent character that shapes the story’s themes and the characters’ experiences. In this world stripped of its vitality, the environment mirrors the erosion of h
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O'Connor, John. "Madness of the Mind." Ata: Journal of Psychotherapy Aotearoa New Zealand 22, no. 1 (2018): 63–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.9791/ajpanz.2018.06.

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The art of psychotherapy has been defined as the capacity of the psychotherapist’s mind to receive the psyche of the patient, particularly its unconscious contents. This deceptively simple definition implies the enormously complex art of receiving the most disturbed, dissociated, maddening, often young and primitive, frightening, and fragmented aspects of the patient’s multiple ages and selves, in the hope perhaps that we might make available to our own mind, to the patient’s mind, and within the therapeutic relationship, whatever it is that we discover together, perhaps with the possibility t
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Hülsz Piccone, Enrique Adolfo. "Dos fragmentos de Heráclito acerca de psyche y logos." Theoría. Revista del Colegio de Filosofía, no. 6 (November 1, 1998): 99–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.22201/ffyl.16656415p.1998.6.200.

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This is a brief survey and interpretation of the text of the only two Heraclitean fragments that connect explicitly psyche and logos, B45 and B115. Introductory pages deal with the traditional significance of the word psyche, and the meaning and philosophical importance of the complex term of logos, which appears in several other genuine texts. Part I is concerned with B45: “If you go to the soul’s limits, you wouldn’t find them, even if you traveled every path: so deep is its logos”. It is mainly an exploration of its many different resonances and its paradoxical rationality. The focal points
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Egunjobi, Joyzy Pius, Paulin Habimana, and Jacinta Ncheteka Onye. "Development, Reliability, and Validity of Psycho-Spiritual Wellbeing Scale (P-SWBS)." International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science VII, no. XI (2023): 926–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.47772/ijriss.2023.7011071.

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Until recently, researchers have been combining the Ryft’s Psychological Wellbeing Scale (PWBS) and Ellison and Paloutzian’s Spiritual Wellbeing Scale (SWBS) in an attempt to measure what can be considered psycho-spiritual wellbeing. This attempt makes psycho-spiritual wellbeing appear fragmented. This necessitated the development of the Psycho-Spiritual Wellbeing Scale (P-SWBS) which measures psycho-spiritual wellbeing on the five domains: Self-Awareness, Connectedness, Meaningfulness, Compassion, and Self-Transcendence. The purpose of the study is to ascertain the psychometric properties of
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Ngulube, Innocent Akili. "Beyond Self-Recognition: Fragmented Subjectivity in Alain Mabanckou’s Blue White Red and African Psycho." Research in African Literatures 54, no. 1 (2023): 163–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/ral.2023.a915645.

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ABSTRACT: The following article examines the treatment of subjectivity in Alain Mabanckou’s Blue White Red and African Psycho from an African postmodernist perspective. My argument is that this Afrodiasporic writer from the Republic of Congo localizes in a postcolonial context the postmodernist motif of fragmented subjectivity in order to critique the psychological effects of enforced modernity on the protagonists of the two novels, namely Massala-Massala and Grégoire Nabomakoyo, respectively. In developing this argument, I show how the former’s immigrant experiences in Paris and the latter’s
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Bhimavarapu, Anitha, and U. M. Gopal Krishna. "FRAGMENTED LIVES: EXPLORING THE INNER WORLDS OF GIG WORKERS." ShodhKosh: Journal of Visual and Performing Arts 5, no. 1 (2024): 957–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.29121/shodhkosh.v5.i1.2024.2449.

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The gig economy has become a prominent topic in the 21st century, according to an independent review of workers' emerging era. There are many different types of occupations available in India's gig economy, and the sum of people working in this sector continues to rise. Gig workers face various obstacles. The psychological requirements for gig workers have slowly begun to receive prominence. Limited study exists on psychological capital among gig workers in India. This study intended to test a "Psychological Capital Questionnaire (PCQ)" for freelance employees. The 24-item PCQ measured "self-e
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Zhu, Hengrui. "Paprika: Journey of Characters' Dissociative Psyches to Integration Through Freudian Analysis." Communications in Humanities Research 41, no. 1 (2024): None. http://dx.doi.org/10.54254/2753-7064/41/2024ne0023.

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Paprika is a film that intricately explores the boundaries between dreams and reality, drawing heavily on Freudian psychoanalytic theory. This paper examines how the film employs the characters' dreams to investigate their unconscious minds, reflecting hidden desires and internal conflicts. By focusing on three primary characters--Chiba Atsuko, Officer Konakawa, and the Chairman--the analysis highlights the film's portrayal of identity and self-discovery through the process of psychological integration. Chiba's dual persona, Paprika, exemplifies the dynamic interplay between the id, ego, and s
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Khalil Hamdi, Tahrir. "Burying the Dead: The Postcolonial Strategies of Achebe and Naipaul." International Journal of Arabic-English Studies 9, no. 1 (2008): 5–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.33806/ijaes2000.9.1.1.

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Mapping out a successful postcolonial strategy/response for the ‘native intellectual’ is a worthwhile endeavour in this global era, especially as the postcolonial subject is bombarded with countless Western-based theories that emphasize ‘fragmented’ or ‘floating’ identities, which occupy an ambiguous space. This paper will examine the strategies undertaken by two current postcolonial writers, V.S. Naipaul and Chinua Achebe, who have negotiated for themselves ideologically opposed strategies, which as I will argue, represent radically different psychological states of development on the part of
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Victoria, CIORNEI, and PALADI Adriana. "Level of professional Burnout among family physicians in the Republic of Moldova and certain aspects regarding its contributing factors." One Health & Risk Management 6, no. 2 (2025): 45–52. https://doi.org/10.38045/ohrm.2025.2.04.

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Introduction. Family medicine represents a key component of the healthcare system, a specialty characterized by fragmented work, high demands from patients/families/communities, and often conflicting interactions, all of which are conditions that predict stress and the onset of burnout. The aim of this study was to assess the degree to which family physicians in the Republic of Moldova are affected by professional burnout, as well as to identify its determining factors. Materials and methods. The research was conducted as a descriptive cross-sectional study from November 2023 to February 2024,
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Patricia, Pauline. "PELAYANAN PASTORAL YANG MELIBATKAN TUBUH: INTEGRASI ANTARA KATA DAN TUBUH." Jurnal Abdiel: Khazanah Pemikiran Teologi, Pendidikan Agama Kristen, dan Musik Gereja 3, no. 2 (2019): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.37368/ja.v3i2.96.

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This paper proposes an integrated pastoral service model. I begin with a fundamental question, what kind of pastoral care is right for people who are traumatized? Pastoral care with the dimension of voice and words will certainly be very difficult for those who are unable to speak their wound experience. Because, trauma causes someone's memory and life to be fragmented, making it difficult for them to be open and tell stories. Therefore, integrated pastoral care between verbatim and psycho-physiotherapy can be an alternative for counselors dealing with those who have experienced trauma. This p
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Berehova, Mariia. "Methodology of training students in psychological and pedagogical support of children with sen in the conditions of inclusion." ScienceRise: Pedagogical Education, no. 2 (63) (May 30, 2025): 21–25. https://doi.org/10.15587/2519-4984.2025.331580.

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The article is devoted to the development and implementation of methodological approaches for training future specialists who will provide psycho-pedagogical support to children with psychophysical developmental disorders in inclusive education settings. The authors base their research on modern theoretical principles of inclusive pedagogy that take into account the specific developmental characteristics of children with special educational needs, and they emphasize the necessity of integrating practical skills with theoretical knowledge. An important component of the study is the analysis of
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OLARU, Claudia, Magdalena IORGA, Radian Alexandru OLARU, Nicoleta GIMIGA, Camelia SOPONARU, and Smaranda DIACONESCU. "Psychological aspects of patients with encopresis associated with chronic constipation." Romanian Journal of Medical Practice 10, no. 4 (2015): 333–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.37897/rjmp.2015.4.5.

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Chronic constipation is an extremely common and costly condition that can negatively impact the patient’s quality of life, resulting in a major economic and social burden. Most patients do not understand their situation and suffer from social isolation. The developmental particularities of the child cause the etiology and symptomatology of constipation to differ from those described by adults, which requires a specific management in terms of diagnosis and treatment. The specialty literature to date relies on fragmented studies focused on these particularities, as well as on the multitude of as
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Kumar, A., and K. P. Rao. "When to call it quits - a case report." European Psychiatry 26, S2 (2011): 645. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0924-9338(11)72351-3.

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IntroductionWe present a case report highlighting the central role of psychiatrist in care coordination in spite of current trends when care is fragmented and provided by specialist teams. The importance of organic causation in bio-psycho-social case formulation and its treatment is emphasized.ObjectivesTo demonstrate the range of skills employed by practicing psychiatrist in optimising the care of the patients.AimsThe role of Psychiatrists in managing risk in the suicidal patient with depressive illness is paramount and central.MethodThe highlights in a patient’s journey are revisited via a r
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Alatrash, Muhammad Khaled. "Between Persona and Shadow: A Feminist–Jungian Dissection of The Silence of the Lambs." International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation 8, no. 5 (2025): 01–08. https://doi.org/10.32996/ijllt.2025.8.5.1.

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By refracting modern anxieties through Jung’s Shadow and Persona archetypes and the process of individuation, this study reveals how The Silence of the Lambs fuses deep psychic fractures with rigid institutional constraints to conjure its unique form of monstrosity. A close reading of Buffalo Bill’s desperate pursuit of self, Hannibal Lecter’s cultivated menace, and Clarice Starling’s struggle for agency demonstrates that fragmented identity and eroded authenticity galvanize the film’s haunting power. Feminist critique further exposes how entrenched gender norms reshape traditional heroism and
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Zhang, Zhiyong, Peng Wang, Yue Gao, and Bing Ye. "Current Development Status of Forest Therapy in China." Healthcare 8, no. 1 (2020): 61. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8010061.

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As a result of rapid urbanization and urban sprawl, natural ecosystems are shrinking or are fragmented, affecting people’s health and quality of life. Modern people prefer to live in large cities rather than rural areas because of greater convenience and more comfortable living conditions. As a consequence, people are suffering from many psycho-physiological health problems and have a longing for natural environments to escape the concrete jungle. Forest therapy has emerged as a preventive and alternative therapy to cope with stress and enhance people’s health and wellbeing as a result of spen
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Greenberg, Benjamin. "Ameliorative mechanisms of psychodynamic psychotherapy in the treatment of developmental trauma." Attachment: New Directions in Psychotherapy and Relational Psychoanalysis 17, no. 2 (2023): 155–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.33212/att.v17n2.2023.155.

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Towards ethically confronting the challenging and complex symptomology of developmental trauma this article proposes that psychodynamic therapy's inclusion of relational process contextual and attachment level considerations apply directly to the complexbio psycho social and systemic issues arising from such a dversity Acknowledging the problematic legacy of invalidating the very real impact of racial gender and socio economic disenfranchisement it is proposed that when accounting for these disparities psychodynamic therapy is powerfully suited to address the deeply embedded unspeakable aspect
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Rouhi, S., J. Topcu, N. Egorova Brumley, and A. Jordan. "P100 Different effect of sleep loss paradigms on various pain types in healthy subjects: A systematic review and meta-analysis." SLEEP Advances 3, Supplement_1 (2022): A62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleepadvances/zpac029.170.

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Abstract Introduction Sleep disturbances are comorbid with chronic pain, exacerbating pain conditions. Experimental studies have implemented different sleep loss paradigms combined with quantitative sensory testing to better understand the sleep-pain relationship. However, knowledge of which sleep loss paradigms are most detrimental regarding hyperalgesia is lacking. The current review aims to differentiate the effect of fragmented sleep from partial or total sleep deprivation and determine whether sleep-loss-related hyperalgesia is due to curtailed/deprived consolidated sleep or sleep continu
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Dicu, Anca. "From nutrition to sustainability: a scoping review on integrated approaches to food and diet." Technium: Romanian Journal of Applied Sciences and Technology 30 (May 27, 2025): 19–34. https://doi.org/10.47577/technium.v30i.12804.

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In the past decade, bringing together nutrition and sustainability has emerged as a core priority for worldwide research, policy, and practice. Dietary decisions are not merely viewed as personal health choices but as decisions embedded in ecological, social, and psychological systems. While attention to sustainable food systems and diets is growing, evidence remains fragmented across disciplines and settings. This scoping review mapped the literature on integrated food and nutrition strategies to sustainable development systematically. According to PRISMA-ScR, we searched the Web of Science C
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Devenish-Meares, Reverend Peter. "The ‘tapestry’ of bricolage: Extending interdisciplinary approaches to psycho-spiritual self-care research." Methodological Innovations 13, no. 1 (2020): 205979911989841. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2059799119898410.

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Interdisciplinary psycho-spiritual research into workplace stress and self-care is scant noting the fact that negative self-talk and harsh self-judgement stymie the search for inner meaning and self-care. To address this, this article uses an intuitive and reflection-oriented methodology to research self-care choices for the stressed and suffering worker. In particular, it breaks new ground because no workplace-based applied psycho-spiritual research uses bricolage, let alone the heuristic inquiry process which gives expression to it. Bricolage is a tapestry of ideas, themes and possibilities
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Danesi, Marcel. "Memes and the Future of Pop Culture." Brill Research Perspectives in Popular Culture 1, no. 1 (2019): 1–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/25894439-12340001.

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Abstract Pop culture, as a distinct form of culture with its own historical, artistic and textual categories, crystallized in the first decades of the twentieth century as a reaction to the restrictive social traditions of colonial America. It spread quickly and broadly throughout the bustling urban centers of the 1920s—an era when it formed a partnership with technology and the business world. This coalition gave pop culture its identity, allowing it to thrive and form alliances with artistic and literary movements. But pop culture may have run its course with the rise of meme culture—a cultu
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