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Trevor's Parental Preservation. The importance of parent-child relationships in the short fiction of William Trevor
Trevor's Parental Preservation. The importance of parent-child relationships in the short fiction of William Trevor
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In this paper, I will firstly show how Trevor links societal oppression to his characters' misguided loyalties to outdated social frameworks and conventions. This loyalty is depicted by Trevor, as passed down from parent to child, in a society in which parents control every aspect of their children's lives. Parents are depicted by Trevor as constantly encouraging their children to adhere to their own outdated social traditions. It is this that elucidates the importance of parent-child relationships in Trevor's stories. The relationships themselves perform as the vehicles through which social oppressiveness and entrapment is sustained in rural Irish society, themes not only central to Trevor's work but the whole canon of Irish short fiction with which Trevor is in discourse.
I will also look at briefly, the child-parent relationship from the psychoanalytical perspective of Freud, describing how through parental encouragement of their children to internalize their values, they initiate a psychological regression in their child. I will further argue that this regression to immaturity mirrors the repetitive and repressive social cycle that is further depicted by Trevor. He seems to be suggesting that rural I
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