“PSYCHOLOGICAL CONFLICT IN ‘THE GIRL WITH THE BLACKENED EYE’ BY JOYCE CAROL OATES”
Keywords:
Inner Conflict, Psychological Conflict, Trauma Identity crisis Violence and abuse Gender dynamicsAbstract
This article conducts a literary-psychological analysis of Joyce Carol Oates's short story 'The Girl with the Blackened Eye'. Employing a qualitative methodology rooted in psychoanalytic and trauma theory, the study investigates the profound psychological conflict experienced by the unnamed female protagonist following her abduction and sexual assault. The conflict is framed as a struggle between the conscious imperative for survival and normative social performance, and the unconscious, traumatic memory that threatens to dismantle the self. The analysis reveals how this internal schism manifests through narrative fragmentation, somatic symptoms, and linguistic dissociation. The protagonist's use of the second-person narrative voice ('you') is identified as a critical linguistic mechanism for managing unbearable psychic pain, creating a defensive distance from the traumatic self. The findings contribute to understanding how literature formally embodies post-traumatic stress, illustrating the conflict not as a binary but as a destabilizing force that permanently alters identity and perception. The study positions Oates's work as a significant exploration of the silent, internal aftermath of violence against women.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.