Study of Psychological Dualism in Post-war Transitional Era in Hesse‟s Steppenwolf
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Faculty of Art in English
Abstract
This research paper explores the distortions of individual’s psyche in a post-war
transitional political juncture based on Herman Hesse’s Steppenwolf. It studies the deviation
in the protagonist’s (Harry Haller) normal life followed by his discontent towards the
changes seen in the overlapping phase. While reading this book from psychological and
political perspectives, Haller’s deteriorating condition has become inevitable not because he
is not following the change but because he denies to submit to the voice of crowd who hanker
after the change. This lack of submission has caused insurmountable sufferings in his life,
devastating his social and psychological integration. Thus, the primary aim of this study is to
probe into the internal conflict of an individual and identify the reasons behind his/her
deterioration at the moment of phasic instability. To this end, the paper answers the
questions regarding the instability of contradictions formed after war (not specified in the
novel); and shows resulting impacts on individuals. It also focuses on how the affected
individual reforms himself in a newly formed era. For this, it makes a study of psychological
and political dimensions of social formation. It approaches the dimensions through the study
of Gustave Le Bon’s mass psychology; Edward Bernays’ implementation of propaganda; and
Michel Foucault’s concept of discursive formation, madness and hermeneutics of subject.
The paper comes to a finding that a shift in era comprises of manipulation of conscience and
forming a collective unconscious where a projected crowd is oriented. Resistance towards
the transition invites further bondage as an individual cannot flee power play.
