American Research Journal of English and Literature        cover
Open Access

American Research Journal of English and Literature

ISSN (Online): 2378-9026

DOI: 10.46568/arjel

Research Article Vol. 8, Issue 1 2021 Open Access

The Adios of Shackles in John Fowles’s novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman

Shireen Ahmed Khorsheed Khorsheed

Istanbul Aydın Universitesi, Istanbul, Turkey.
 Shireen Ahmed Khorsheed Khorsheed, “The Adios of Shackles in John Fowles’s novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman”, American Research Journal of English and Literature, Vol 8, no. 1, 2022, pp. 61-64
Abstract
Following the consequences of the Second World War, the majority of authors wrote their literary works to respond to the world’s massive destruction. The dominant idea that engaged authors’ minds during a time when there was a big need to be free from all authorities that led man to encourage him blindly to kill his brothers and sisters in humanity and to destroy the world. The writer John Fowles assumed man has to be free from following those rules and constraints. John Fowles’s novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman was written in Neo-Victorian prose’s style but with Postmodernism per spectives. This paper attempts to analyze and apply the theoretical perspectives of “The Death of the Author” by Roland Barthes and “The Birth of the Reader” on the novel of John Fowles which is regarded to be a postmodern novel from mul tiple perceptions. Firstly, the storyteller’s involvement to a variety of opinions as well as substitute endings. The second point, considering this book as a historical text, by applying the method of Linda Hutcheon, Historiographic metafiction, includes the meaning of rewriting history since postmodern writers do not believe in the originality of historical truths or the existence of absolute truths. Fowles wanted to free people from those dogmas. Those entire methods in this text disclose Fowles to reconstruct and deconstruct the Victorian culture through the main character Sarah woodruff that makes Fowles’s novel a perfect example of Postmodernism.