![]() ![]() Indeed, what is arguably the novel’s “climax” - the male protagonist’s ejaculatio praecox on his wedding night-can be read as an example of bad timing in its most corporeal form. On Chesil Beach takes the question of time and timing very literally, concretizing that concern in the novel’s very structure as well as central action. Consider, for example, The Child in Time, Enduring Love, and Saturday: each is structured by the complex temporality of what Freud called Nachträglichkeit, in which a traumatic event in present time compels a character’s obsessional return to a past enigmatic moment that itself becomes traumatic through this linkage, forming a kind of perverse temporal knot of reciprocal relations that shapes the character’s future. More particularly, McEwan exploits psychoanalytic understandings of the effects of trauma on time by representing the ways in which temporal relations are disrupted and perverted by traumatic contingencies. ![]() ![]() It certainly characterizes time in the fiction of Ian McEwan, which often foregrounds the protagonist’s relation to temporality as a major theme. This reciprocity, which undermines the more conventional linear notion of time as a continuum moving in succession from past through present to future, is as characteristic of modern fiction as it is of psychoanalysis. ![]() Hans Loewald once noted that in psychoanalysis, temporality involves a reciprocal relationship between past, present and future. ![]()
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