Loneliness, Isolation and Sexuality: The Portrayal of Adolescents in Carson McCullers' Short Fiction
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Southern literature underwent a renaissance between the 1920s and 40s when authors of
the era created works in a new literary mode called Southern Gothic and used grotesque
elements to dismantle the idols and values of the Old South. Carson McCullers was one
of them and her Southern Gothic style created a number of grotesque characters, many
of whom were adolescents, who became the embodiment of southern society as it
existed during the Great Depression in the 1930s and the Second World War in the
1940s. She told the stories of these socially-excluded children and ostracized teenagers
who transgressed boundaries defined by the rigid social conventions in her short fiction.
Using a queer theory framework, this thesis will analyze the grotesque children,
adolescents, and families found in six of Carson McCullers‘s short stories—―The
Haunted Boy‖ (1955), ―Breath from the Sky‖ (1971), ―Like That‖ (1971),
―Wunderkind‖ (1936), ―Court in the West Eighties‖ (1971), and ―The Orphanage‖
(1971)—with a special focus on expressions of loneliness, isolation, and sexuality. By
examining these characters and their gothic manifestations, more insight can be gained
into McCullers‘s thoughts on the crucial issues of her time, especially (homo)sexuality,
gender expression (tomboys, masculinity, and femininity), sexual awakening,
(dis)placement, and apathy.
Analyzing these understudied characters is particularly important because they serve as
significant forerunners to her later adolescent characters found in novels and plays such
as The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, The Member of the Wedding and Clock Without
Hands. Moreover, the adolescent characters in her short stories provide us with a
window into American society, and especially the changing nature of the family unit,
during the Great Depression and Second World War eras, which McCullers evaluates
and critiques through a Southern Gothic lens.