A study of the novels of Patrick White : "Man and the individual experience."
Abstract
She thought of the narrowness of the limits
within which a human soul may speak and be
understood by its nearest of mental kin, of
how soon it reaches that solitary land of
the individual experience, in which no fellow
footfall is ever heard. (Olive Schreiner).
Epigraph to Part One of The Aunt's Story.
The title of this study, 'Man and the Individual Experience1,
has been taken from the passage quoted above, and the quotation
itself serves admirably to suggest the main preoccupations of
Patrick White in all his novels. For White, in spite of certain
shifts of emphasis and diversity of treatment, has been concerned
primarily with the problems of human existence; with the isolation
of the individual, and his attempt to establish some communication
with those nearest to him, and to arrive at a satisfying condition
of personal integration and self-fulfilment.
From his desire to suggest the ’’mystery and poetry” of
life and to attempt an imaginative synthesis of some greater
metaphysical reality with the observed realities of ordinary
living, White has succeeded in adding another dimension to the
novel in this country. Previous Australian novelists have
belonged rather to the naturalistic tradition, and White's emphasis on the inner and spiritual life of the individual has
introduced a new element; one, however, which has been evident
for some time in Australian poetry. Through the exercise of
iiis imaginative vision and the immediacy of his presentation he
has attempted to open up for the reader the world of greater
realities of which he himself is convinced. His concern is not
vith nationalistic or social issues, but with man and his search
for personal identity, for complete self-realization and for a
share in some final and satisfying reality. (First two paragraphs of Introduction.)
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