Possession Short Story Analysis

1936 Words8 Pages

Love has many shapes and comes in many forms. What is the love in Romance like? What is the nature of love in the postmodern story? How is love expressed in the novel written by A.S. Byatt named Possession – A romance? The quote from Umberto Eco outlined that postmodern love has a different character from love in the narratives that have been written before the era of postmodernism. This paper explores the theme of love reflected in the novel Possession and provides the analysis and explanation of the representation of this theme in the story.
The main aim of this paper is to explore a postmodern nature of the novel and a possessive connotation of love in the Possession as the author believes that this love is more a obsession. Author points …show more content…

The style of narration of the poems and letters differs according to the speaker, so the feeling that the different person tells a story becomes even more realistic. As it was stated previously, author the story uses different speakers to make a narration. This fact leads to another example of postmodernism which is multiplicity of voices. Reader is provided with several voices, opinions and points of view achieved through the different perspectives and natures of the …show more content…

The author combines detective story, sarcasm, parallel development of the two love stories, neo-victorian fiction, poetry, prose and much more together in one novel which is very typical of postmodernism. (BERTOLDI, 2012, p.2) The title might be the one element that catches reader´s attention. What does the "A Romance" part in the title means? Normally, the typical romance narrates around the quest motif, which is present in Possession. Moreover, the story shapes around the theme of a love story and reminds of a gothic and detective genre, which is another element of romance. (DOMÍNGUES, 1995, p.85) Although a romance as a genre was considered to be in decline, it is more and more popular today. A new form, called postmodern romance appears. "The rise of this new variety of romance is not a break with tradition: postmodern romances form a separate but dependent group

Open Document