@article{article_1544770, title={Reinterpreting the Dynamics Between the Surrealist Artist and the Muse in Mina Loy’s ’Insel’}, journal={Hacettepe Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Dergisi}, volume={42}, pages={11–22}, year={2025}, DOI={10.32600/huefd.1544770}, author={Danacı Gürler, Fahriye Selvi}, keywords={Mina Loy, Insel, sürrealizm, sürrealist ilham perisi, benlik}, abstract={Mina Loy’s Insel recounts the friendship between Mrs. Jones, an art dealer, and Insel, an idiosyncratic surrealist painter, in 1930s Paris, based on Loy’s friendship with the surrealist painter Richard Oelze. The novel is often compared to André Breton’s surrealist piece, Nadja in which Breton employs a mad and beautiful young woman as his muse in his journey of self-search. However, in contrast to Nadja’s idealised, passive, and silenced presence in Breton’s creative process, Loy prefers to portray a rather dynamic relationship between a female artist in constant self-doubt about her creativity and a male muse, who is depicted as a physically repulsive, derelict figure. By undermining the generally acknowledged roles of the surrealist artist and the muse, the male artist being the centre of the surrealist experience while the female muse serving as a divine, mad, and beautiful source of inspiration, Loy explores the potentials of a scenario where the surrealist muse is not a silent bystander, but a central agent in the creative process, functioning as an equal part of the artist’s creating mind. Therefore, this article argues that through Jones’s connection with Insel, Loy introduces a fresh discussion on the nature of selfhood not as a singular entity, but as the outcome of a continuous dialogue among multiplicity of selves, as well as questioning and reimagining the relationship between the surrealist artist and the muse.}, number={1}, publisher={Hacettepe Üniversitesi}