Hearing voices: The extended mind in Evelyn waugh’s the ordeal of gilbert pinfold

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Abstract

Waugh’s last comic novel The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold (1957) takes ‘exterior modernism’ to a new height, no longer avoiding interiority – as in his interwar fiction – but exteriorising the interior through dissociation. ‘The Box’, to which the writer-protagonist attributes the source of the tormenting voices, may well be his own mind, an extended – albeit unhealthy – mind that works as a radio: he transmits his thoughts and then receives them as external signals in order to communicate with them. Pinfold’s auditory hallucinations are caused by the breakdown of communication. Interestingly, writing is also a dissociative activity. Concerned with the writer’s block, the novel reflects on the creative process and illuminates the relationship between madness and creativity. If dissociation, or the splitting of the mind, is a defence against trauma, the traumatic experience Pinfold attempts to suppress is the Second World War. The unusual state of mind accentuates the contingency of Waugh’s radio writing; his preferred medium is cinema.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)202-224
Number of pages23
JournalModernist Cultures
Volume15
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2020

Keywords

  • Auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH)
  • Communications technology
  • Dissociation and trauma
  • Distributed cognition
  • Exterior modernism

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