Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.univ-guelma.dz/jspui/handle/123456789/12751
Title: Depression in Adam Haslett’s Imagine Me Gone:
Other Titles: A Psychoanalytical Study
Authors: Malek ZEMMIT ou ZEMMITTI, Manel MOUSSAOUI
Keywords: Depression, Mental Illness, Adam Haslett, Imagine Me Gone, Psychoanalysis.
Issue Date: Sep-2021
Abstract: This thesis is an examination and a detailed interpretation of the characters of Adam Haslett’s novel Imagine Me Gone (2016), in which he focuses on the inner side of them and the family struggles with mental illness and the chronic depression. Thus, it will look at the characters’ behaviors and actions, using Sigmund Freud’s and Lacan’s Psychoanalytic criticism theories, which explain how humans have unconscious struggles and repressed thoughts, which affect their behaviors and that they should be analyzed in order to understand those behaviors. The author, with his great way of capturing the different inner worlds of his characters, focuses on his main character, who inherits his father’s severe depression. The paper, therefore, will explain how depression affects the characters and how it prevents them from having a normal life within the family and with the outside world.
URI: http://dspace.univ-guelma.dz/jspui/handle/123456789/12751
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