Mental Illness as a Factor in the Creation of the Contemporary Romantic

Journal Title: New Horizons in English Studies - Year 2016, Vol 1, Issue 1

Abstract

The paper discusses the image of a mad person in the movie Donnie Darko by Richard Kelly. I want to examine the deranged protagonist as a contemporary Romantic by comparing Donnie Darko’s features and his approach to society with concepts espoused by Romanticism. The focus is on schizophrenia as a condition that influences Donnie’s perception, providing typical symptoms displayed by the protagonist (thought disturbance, various types of delusion or hallucination, acts of antisocial behaviour) as well as problems in information processing. I argue that it is Donnie’s condition that makes him a contemporary Romantic – he sees more, feels more and, in the end, he trusts intuition and emotions rather than rational explanation. The eponymous character is a young, alienated idealist who believes that the world can be changed. Donnie refuses to accept social norms or rules as an exceptional and rebellious outsider in search of the meaning of life. Eventually, the Romantic fascination with freedom and nature corresponds to the perception of the illness as liberation of one’s true nature.

Authors and Affiliations

Dominika Szymańska

Keywords

Related Articles

The Importance of the Ordinary. Moments of Being in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway

“A Sketch of the Past” is an essay in which Virginia Woolf recollects her childhood memories and reflects upon certain events, while trying to understand why she remembers them and forgets others. She mentions the concep...

Two Cinematic Portrayals of Teachers: John Keating in Dead Poets Society and Terence Fletcher in Whiplash

This paper is devoted to two selected teacher figures appearing in American film. John Keating (Dead Poets Society) and Terence Fletcher (Whiplash) are going to be analyzed with regard to their beliefs, their methods, an...

Online Adaptation of Word-initial Ukrainian CC Consonant Clusters by Native Speakers of English

The phenomenon of loanword adaptation occupies a prominent position in modern phonological literature. The present paper introduces the major theories which deal with this phenomenon as well as presenting the author’s ex...

The Translation Minefield On Specific Translation Challenges Posed by the Graphic Novel Form

The comic book genre, or, to be more precise, medium (Chute and Dekoven 2012), like any other, creates many formal elements which influence the interpretation of the story and set particular technical boundaries to the a...

Why Money Cannot Buy Happiness. The Painful Truth about Traditional Proverbs and Their Modifications

Can one imagine language without proverbs? Do we really need these somewhat clichéd adages like An apple a day keeps a doctor away, Once bitten, twice shy, or Crime doesn’t pay? Are they still influential, or perhaps mod...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP421751
  • DOI 10.17951/nh.2016.1.60
  • Views 92
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Dominika Szymańska (2016). Mental Illness as a Factor in the Creation of the Contemporary Romantic. New Horizons in English Studies, 1(1), 60-67. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-421751