On being a discontinuous person: ontological insecurity, the wounded storyteller and time in Daniel Keyes’s Flowers for Algernon
Loading...
Date
Authors
Ullyatt, Tony
Researcher ID
Supervisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
AOSIS
Record Identifier
Abstract
This article explores ontological security and insecurity in Daniel Keyes’s novel, Flowers for
Algernon. It opens with a very brief overview of the 1960s counter-culture to contextualise not
only Keyes’s novel but also Laing’s theories of ontological (in)security. After a discussion of
Laing’s concept of ontological security and insecurity, the focus shifts to Arthur W. Frank’s
notions of the wounded storyteller and how Charlie Gordon’s entry into the medical world
constitutes a colonisation of the body that brings with it a deepening sense of ontological
insecurity. In entering the world of medical research, Charlie becomes the wounded storyteller,
offering a first-person account of his experiences during the experiment and its aftermath.
As the initial success of the surgery deteriorates steadily into failure, with the protagonist’s
intelligence returning steadily to its pre-operation level, the question of time and how he can
make the best use of it to record the experiment becomes paramount. The final section of the
article centres on the growing link between the surgery’s failure and how it increases the
protagonist’s ontological insecurity. He uses the diminishing amount of time available to him
in search of understanding the fuller implications of the experiment. Eventually, he reverts to
his initial rudimentary ontological security when he finds himself with the same intellectual
level, as prior to the experiment.
Sustainable Development Goals
Description
Keywords
Citation
Ullyatt, A. 2015. On being a discontinuous person: ontological insecurity, the wounded storyteller and time in Daniel Keyes’s Flowers for Algernon. Literator, 36(1):1–11. [http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/lit. v36i1.1173]
