A psycholinguistic analysis of the use of language by disabled characters in: mosteghanemi’s memory in the flesh and plath’s the bell jar
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
This thesis addresses the impact of physical and mental disability on language use.
Disability is an inseparable aspect of human existence. Despite its pervasive presence in life,
it still occupies an almost invisible place in literature. Because fictional representations inform
the way we conceive and interpret physical impairment and mental distress, understanding the
language of disabled people is vital to understand disability. This thesis argues that the
language of disability is an embodied phenomenon. It examines the psychological effects of
disability and their linguistic reflections through a psycholinguistic analysis of two novels
portraying disabled characters: Mosteghanemi’s Memory in the Flesh and Plath’s The Bell
Jar. The two novels feature both physical impairment and mental disorder. Thus, they provide
deeper insights into the psychological and linguistic nature of disability. The study begins
with Plath’s The Bell Jar. Using many autobiographical elements, Plath provides an account
of the hysteric, schizophrenic and depressive experience of Esther Greenwood; a nineteen
years old American student. The concern is to demonstrate the semantic, syntactic, discursive
and pragmatic manifestation of mental disability in the narrative. As for physical disability,
Mosteghanemi’s Memory in the Flesh is examined. Mosteghanemi depicts the traumatic
experience of Khalid Ben Toubal; a war-disabled artist. The linguistic reflections of disability
in Khalid’s narrative are figured out in the use of paralanguage, body language, silence, and
nonverbal art as a form of expression. These fictional representations of disability in its
different forms bring into light the daily struggles of disabled people, reflected in a language
of alienation, repression, self-estrangement and discriminatory practices. Analysing the
language of disability in literature may help to achieve a better understanding of disability as a
creative force and an aspect of richness in human nature. A more comprehensive conception
of disability represents a triumph of diversity over normalization and adversity.