Wartime Spaces in Elizabeth Bowen's “sunday Afternoon”

dc.contributor.author Elbir,N.B.
dc.contributor.other Department of English Language and Literature
dc.contributor.other Department of English Language and Literature
dc.contributor.other 17. Graduate School of Social Sciences
dc.contributor.other 02. School of Arts and Sciences
dc.contributor.other 01. Atılım University
dc.date.accessioned 2024-10-06T11:16:47Z
dc.date.available 2024-10-06T11:16:47Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.description.abstract This article examines the treatment of space and time in the Anglo-Irish writer Elizabeth Bowen's wartime short story “Sunday Afternoon” (1941), to discuss how the use of spatiality and spatial images in the narrative discourse of the story enables her to convey the social and physical reality of the Second World War, and the psychological, interior states and anxietiesof her characters, revealing their sense of dislocation and disorientation caused by wartime conditions. My argument is inspired mainly by Mikhail Bakhtin's concept of the “chronotope” and Gaston Bachelard's definition of the house as “psychic space.” The protagonist of the story is an Anglo-Irish man who is on a visit to his old friends in Ireland from London, where his home has been destroyed by the Blitz. He is soon to return to his Ministry job in blitzed London and to an uncertain and frightening future. I argue that the setting of the story, the Anglo-Irish Ascendancy big house and its environs in neutral Ireland, becomes a Bakhtinian chronotope where, as Bakhtin putsit, “time, asit were, thickens, takeson flesh, becomes artistically visible; likewise, space becomes charged and responsive to the movements of time, plot and history” (84), and the house portrayed as a familiar and well-remembered space that takes the protagonist back to his past functions as an image that, in Bachelard's words, “bespeaks intimacy”(72). Thus, the depiction of wartime spaces in “Sunday Afternoon” gains historical and personal significance that merges the past, present and future, and serves to emphasize the convergence of public and private moments of crisis. © 2021 Ovidius University. All rights reserved. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1224-1768
dc.identifier.scopus 2-s2.0-85126638043
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14411/9545
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Ovidius University en_US
dc.relation.ispartof Analele Universitatii Ovidius Constanta, Seria Filologie en_US
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess en_US
dc.subject chronotope en_US
dc.subject Elizabeth Bowen en_US
dc.subject Second World War en_US
dc.subject spatiality en_US
dc.subject temporality en_US
dc.subject the Anglo-Irish big house en_US
dc.subject “Sunday Afternoon” en_US
dc.title Wartime Spaces in Elizabeth Bowen's “sunday Afternoon” en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dspace.entity.type Publication
gdc.author.institutional Elbir, Nüket Belgin
gdc.author.scopusid 57218953120
gdc.coar.access metadata only access
gdc.coar.type text::journal::journal article
gdc.description.department Atılım University en_US
gdc.description.departmenttemp Elbir N.B., Atılım University, Ankara, Turkey en_US
gdc.description.endpage 64 en_US
gdc.description.issue 2 en_US
gdc.description.publicationcategory Makale - Uluslararası Hakemli Dergi - Kurum Öğretim Elemanı en_US
gdc.description.scopusquality Q4
gdc.description.startpage 52 en_US
gdc.description.volume 32 en_US
gdc.scopus.citedcount 0
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