@article{article_1727367, title={Trauma, Testimony and the Limits of Healing in Ian McEwan’s Lessons}, journal={IDEAS: Journal of English Literary Studies}, volume={5}, pages={121–134}, year={2025}, DOI={10.62352/ideas.1727367}, author={Özer, Sena Damla}, keywords={Ian McEwan, Dersler, Tanıklık, Travma, Hafıza}, abstract={Published in 2022, Ian McEwan’s Lessons depicts the complex story of Roland Baines, whose life is deeply marked by trauma, abandonment and loss. The novel explores the effects of abandonment, sexual exploitation, and fractured relationships, particularly through Roland’s interactions with two central figures: Miriam Cornell, his much older piano teacher who sexually abuses him during his adolescence, and Alissa Eberhardt, his wife and the mother of his child who leaves them to pursue literary ambitions. The aim of this paper is to examine the traumatic effects of Roland’s experiences with Miriam and Alissa, and the role of their retrospective testimonies in his slow psychological transformation. This paper argues that Lessons presents trauma recovery not as redemption or resolution, but as an ongoing process of reframing through testimony. Building on trauma theories of Cathy Caruth, Dori Laub and Shoshana Felman, and Dominick LaCapra, this analysis shows how Roland gradually shifts from, in LaCapra’s terms, “acting out”—compulsively reliving the past—to “working through” via testimonial dialogues. These encounters do not provide closure, but they allow for a re-negotiation of memory and a partial release from its repetitive grip. By portraying testimony as a dialogic and complex form rather than a vehicle for definitive healing, McEwan challenges closure-driven trauma narratives and emphasises the incomplete, evolving nature of recovery.}, number={2}, publisher={İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı Araştırmaları Derneği / English Language and Literature Research Association of Turkey}