Displaced: Canadian Mindscapes in Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace Cover Image

Displaced: Canadian Mindscapes in Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace
Displaced: Canadian Mindscapes in Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace

Author(s): Lidia-Mihaela Necula
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Literary Texts, Fiction, Studies of Literature, Novel, Comparative Study of Literature, Theory of Literature
Published by: Editura Casa Cărții de Știință
Keywords: hyperreality; simulacra; fiction; Canadian landscape; hyperreal mindscapes; geographical displacement; mental displacement;

Summary/Abstract: Simply put, hyperreality is used to denote something that does not yet exist in the sense of being undeniably demonstrable. According to Jean Baudrillard in Simulacra and Simulation (1981), hyperreality is a state where reality has been replaced by simulacra, meaning that what is real and what is fictional is indistinguishable. Equally, hyperreality starts as soon as one replaces the question of ‘if’ by ‘when’. Therein, in Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace, it becomes quite difficult to establish whether or not Grace Marks is innocent, pure and wrongly accused of the horrible murders of her employer Thomas Kinnear and his housekeeper, Nancy Montgomery. Likewise, Grace's memory (which, strangely enough, is referred to in terms of its absence rather than its presence since she is supposedly suffering from amnesia) is some sort of virtual reality, an entire world in itself, where Grace can appear to be anything she wants to be. By constantly overlapping the Canadian landscape, Grace’s subconscious enables a window into the world within, one of the past, the present and the future, some sort of interface between three different psychological entities with their corresponding and symbolic representations of the landscape. The present paper looks into the novel from behind the lens of the Canadian landscape (although scarce in occurrences) as a metonymy of hyperreal mindscapes: doubly displaced both geographically (she is an Irish immigrant), and mentally (she seems to be manifesting a form of multiple personality disorder), Grace simultaneously exists in hyperreal mindscapes, mimicking and replicating, stating and questioning, challenging readers who are left adrift in a textual world where the boundaries between reality and representation become blurred.

  • Issue Year: 12/2022
  • Issue No: 12
  • Page Range: 86-94
  • Page Count: 9
  • Language: English