in Mrs dalloway Virginia Woolf treatment of love is original and psychological. discuss
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In Mrs Dalloway, Woolf tries to convey the characters' thoughts as accurately as possible for which she uses the technique known as stream of consciousness.
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A major theme in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway is love, both free and possessive.
- The display of many intricate relationships reveals how love may take many different shapes and have quite different consequences for different individuals.
- It's important to remember that during this era, love was somewhat constrained by a society that encouraged marriage and companionship over romantic passion in favor of financial and social convenience and discourage freedom (especially for women), relationships between classes, and homos.
- The ability to maintain one's identity and independence while sharing one's life in matrimony with another and letting one maintain theirs.
- Additionally, Mrs. Dalloway explores a negative aspect of love through relationships: possessiveness, which is the urge to dominate or consume another person's identity and is motivated by powerful emotions like envy.
Throughout the book, the idea of "free love" is addressed; this idea could be understood as "freedom in love,"
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