Critique of Cosmopolitan Modernity in Hawkins’ The Girl on the Train
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Department of English
Abstract
Mobilizing the concept of modernity and gender, this research project
concentrates upon the difficulties and crises upon female characters in Paula
Hawkins’ novel The Girl on the Train. Most of the female characters in The Girl on
the Train are deviated from their cultural root and individual identity. They feel that
the temptation to follow the westernized thought has distorted the taste and attitude of
the young generation. The main character of this novel Rachel is a middleclass
woman who comes to London in search of her dream. Rachel forgets her real name,
cultural identity and her own background being lost in the midst of western
technocratic world. She becomes puppet on the hands of different males in the city
simply because she is a woman. Modernity promises education, development, and
betterment of humanity. However, modernity deteriorates Rachel to the level of an
object despite enlightening her. The research aims to prove loopholes of modernity
project. This thesis uses concept of modernity and gender conceptualized by Janet
Wolff, Griselda Pollock and Bonnie Kim Scott.
Key Words:
Modernity, City, "flaneurs", "flaneuse", Enlightenment, Females, Exclusion
