Mrs. Dalloway: A Portrait of the Human Experience

 

Mrs. Dalloway: A Portrait of the Human Experience

Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf may seem on the surface to be a jumble of people’s experiences in a day that are rather unrelated to one another. Full of contradictions and complicated subplots, it can be easy to view the novel this way. However, I’d like to argue that Woolf uses this novel to paint a portrait of Clarissa’s and human experiences in general. The book is not merely a story to read for pleasure, but an artistic representation of what it means to be human: to have regrets, jealousy, surface level, and deep relationships. Woolf uses different characters in the novel to represent the different aspects of a life.

Nostalgia and regret are commonly repeating threads throughout Mrs. Dalloway. The two characters that Woolf uses to represent this feeling are Peter Walsh and Sally Seton. We are introduced to this past-reflection in Clarissa early on when she thinks to herself “oh if she could have lived her life over again… [it] could have looked differently,” (Woolf 10). This initially appears to be a regretful statement as Clarissa seems to be stuck in the past, constantly thinking of Peter. However, as the novel progresses, we see Clarissa’s attitude change. In the beginning, it seemed that Clarissa and Peter were similar in the way that they still thought of each other often and felt dissatisfied, but in the end, at the party, we see Clarissa proud of her work as “the perfect hostess,” rather than ashamed of it. Meanwhile, Peter Walsh persists in his judgment of her. There is also Sally Seton, who, after many years has changed but Clarissa is still happy to see. Because there is no melancholy tone in their interactions, just excitement to see each other once again, I believe that throughout the course of the novel, Clarissa comes to the realization that she does not wish to be stuck in the past or change it. Thus, at the end, she is able to appreciate this interaction with Sally fully and without regret.

Judgment and jealousy is another thread that keeps coming back throughout the course of the book. Specifically, Lady Bruton and Peter Walsh both stir up Clarissa’s fear of judgment. When Clarissa isn’t invited to lunch with Lady Bruton and Richard she worries that people think she isn’t important enough to be invited to this event. The spiral this sends her into, thinking about “her body and brain which now failed, since Lady Bruton… had not asked her,” shows her intense fear of not being seen as important enough. Peter Walsh is a representation of a different fear: not being genuine enough. Throughout the book, the “perfect hostess” line resurfaces. She feels that Peter judges her for picking the safer, more conventional path of marrying Richard. She thinks about the person she was when she was eighteen and worries that she has lost her creativity and excitement in her life over the years. The way that Peter and Lady Bruton both represent judgment, but in such different ways shows how big of an issue it is in Clarissa’s life, coming from all directions.

Jealousy and reflection are two of the most prominent ways Woolf uses the wide variety of characters in Mrs. Dalloway to represent different aspects of the human experience. There are many more examples of this, but these two stick out prominently. Mrs. Dalloway is far from the simple description of one specific day in London. Its representation of Clarissa’s emotions through other characters is unique and reflects Virginia Woolf’s ideology that fiction should show complexities of human feelings and connection using character. Her portrait of Clarissa’s life provokes thought in the reader about how their thoughts, actions, and relationships can make up who they are as a person.

Comments

  1. I enjoyed reading your thoughts on a tie between specific characters and emotion throughout the novel. I hadn't previously considered the evocative subthreads through individual characters in Mrs. Dalloway but now must give Woolf great credit for this. I find Richard to provide great ambivalence to his character without much support except for that's how Woolf made me feel. Great blog topic!

    ReplyDelete
  2. In essence, Mrs. Dalloway may appear as a mere narrative about a single day, but is rather an exploration of the human experience and the great subjectivity behind each life. Lady Bruton and Peter represent Clarissa's insecurities about her public role and her private self. Clarissa's reflection on missed childhood opportunities to embracing her identity as the "perfect hostess" symbolizes the acceptance of her life's choices, whereas Peter remains constantly judgemental and dissatisfied, showing how different characters embody various perspectives.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I really liked how you pointed out that the book wasn't really something to read for pleasure as I had a similar experience (And so did my mom after borrowing my book). I tended to have a less than enjoyable experience doing the readings for class, but I felt the opposite when in discussion. Woolf's writing is so dense with detail, and it's so fun to unpack the complicated character dynamics and events that happen in one day of Mrs. Dalloway's world. I think Virginia Woolf might've been aware of this while writing, seeing as the way she flips between characters feels more like a way to really dive into their personalities and thoughts rather than a fun gimmick for the reader.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I think this is such a great analysis of Mrs. Dalloway, and I like how you describe it as a provocative work of art more than a novel to be read for fun and entertainment, because I totally think that this is what Woolf was going for when writing it. In her essays, she describes how character has been lost in fiction, and how novels should be more like character studies than anything else, and I think these ideas are definitely present in Mrs. Dalloway. You did such a great job of explaining this idea, and I think you're completely right about your analysis!

    ReplyDelete
  5. This entire commentary could be viewed as an explication of what we mean by "intersubjectivity" in Woolf's narrative style: characters are defined largely by their views of themselves in relation to others (jealousy and resentment being two of the most prominently negative ways we tend to view ourselves in relation to others) and to the past (nostalgia and regret). I always like to point out how, within this method of characterization, nothing is ever simple, or no person is ever "one thing." This novel trains us to *always* presume there is a LOT more going on with other people than we may realize in a given moment, and that NONE of us have anything like the full picture when it comes to others. The "thinking about the past" trope is a great example: at a glance, it can seem sad or pathetic for these middle-aged people to always be thinking about when they were eighteen. But Woolf depicts this as a largely involuntary process, part of what you describe as the larger portrait of human life--or what it means to be *in the midst of a life that is unfolding*. Doesn't it make sense that we see ourselves as part of a large cluster of stories unfolding, and that we are always thinking of where we are in relation to those plots and characters? Maybe the emotional content of these memories leads to something like "regret" or "nostalgia" (or maybe also "appreciation for what we have" and a sense of contentment with how things have worked out--we see this too from Clarissa), but we can't just condemn characters for "living in the past." Woolf suggests that we all do this in various ways every day--the present makes no sense apart from the past that has shaped it. There IS regret, and there IS nostalgia, but neither is absolute. There is no single way in which to view the past, or the present.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I really like the idea that, similar to The Mezzanine, the novel focuses on the representation of being human. Clarissa's experience through of a day contains hundreds of thoughts, often circling around events of the past, illustrating a story in a time frame that many would consider too short. Clarissa's life takes up the most time in the book, while other characters like Septimus seem to experience a more eventful day. I agree that Virginia Woolf portrays a human day, but I wonder how Septimus's assumed insanity adds to it. Are the characters in the book different facets of Clarissa's own personality, or is the narrative just going through the perspectives of all people who influence Clarissa? Does Septimus's experience influence Clarissa more drastically after the book comes to an end as a reason to include it into her human experience? Great blog post!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I really like that you acknowledge that this is not at all an entertaining book, but rather an exercise in human life and emotion. Woolf has always had a bone to pick with those writers who place so much unnecessary attention on the plot and neglect character development. So I think it's very important to address the fact that this is a main intention of Woolf in this novel. The plot is nothing to be heralded, as it is simply the passage of a day with a party at the end, but the very human thoughts, especially Clarissa's are certainly substance themselves. Great blog post!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment