This section contains 3,700 words (approx. 13 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Tull, J. F., Jr. “Alienation, Psychological and Metaphysical, in Three ‘Nivolas’ of Unamuno.” The Humanities Association Bulletin 21, no. 1 (winter 1970): 27-33.
In the following essay, Tull examines the theme of alienation in Saint Emmanuel the Good, Martyr.
The concept of alienation, both as a psychological term and as a literary theme, seems to be in the process of becoming an empty abstraction, a stereotyped artifice to label conveniently what is, in truth, a habitual way of viewing human society and the universe shared by many individuals in the contemporary world. Actually, the sense of alienation is not new. As a psychological phenomenon in Western culture, it has its roots in the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution in the last century, and on a deeper level, metaphysical alienation began with the dawn of human consciousness, as symbolized in the myth of the Garden of Eden, when man first felt...
This section contains 3,700 words (approx. 13 pages at 300 words per page) |