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Doris Lessing’in Beşinci Çocuk Başlıklı Eserinde Gotik Ögeler ve Aile Parçalanması

Yıl 2025, Sayı: 14, 159 - 182, 28.12.2025
https://doi.org/10.51540/ijof.1787256

Öz

Doris Lessing’in ilk kez 1988’de yayımlanan Beşinci Çocuk adlı eseri, ana konusu 1960’lar ve 1970’ler İngiltere’sinde geçen bir noveladır. Roman, Lovatts ailesinin beşinci çocukları Ben’in doğumuyla birlikte daha önceki mutlu ve uyumlu aile yaşamlarının bozulmasını konu alır. Ben’in anormal ve tedirgin edici doğası, ev ortamına Gotik bir “ötekilik” duygusu taşır. Bir zamanlar mükemmel bir aile olarak görülen Lovatt ailesi, Ben’in “tekinsiz” ve korkunç varlığının baskısı altında dağılmaya başlar. Romanda okuyucunun dikkatini çeken yalnızca konusu değil, aynı zamanda Lessing’in modern toplumun sorunlarını ortaya koymak amacıyla kullandığı Gotik unsurları modern bir biçimde uyarlayışıdır. Lessing, hem Harriet’in içindeki canavarımsı fetüs hem de oğlunun alışılmadık, korkunç ve canavarımsı yönleri ve davranışları aracılığıyla korku temasını işleyerek modern bir bağlamda aileyi kuşatan dehşet ve şiddet durumlarını ortaya koyar. Bu Gotik unsurlar aracılığıyla, aile ilişkilerinin bozulmasını, ev içi mutluluk ve huzurun yıkımını ve nihayetinde ailenin çöküşünü gözler önüne serer. Bu çalışmanın amacı, Beşinci Çocuk’da Gotik ve korku unsurlarını saptayarak, eserin aile parçalanması temasını, görünüşte düzenli bir evdeki istikrarın çöküşünü ve özellikle çocuklar olmak üzere aile bireylerinin refahı açısından birlik ve huzurun önemini nasıl yansıttığını ortaya koymaktır.

Etik Beyan

Yok

Destekleyen Kurum

Yok

Proje Numarası

Yok

Teşekkür

Yok

Kaynakça

  • Abrams, M. H. (1999). A glossary of literary terms. (7th Edition). Heinle&Heinle
  • Alban, G. M. E. (2016). Parents as a destructive or supportive force in Carter, Murdoch and Lessing. International journal of media culture and literature, 2(4), 27-45.
  • Anievas Gamallo, I. C. (2000). Motherhood and the fear of the other: magic, fable and the gothic in Doris Lessing’s the fifth child. In R. Todd and L. Flora (Eds.). Theme parks, rainforests and sprouting wasteland: European essays on theory and performance in contemporary British fiction. Rodopi. pp. 113-124. Retrieved from [https://brill.com/display/book/9789004454941/B9789004454941_s012.xml?srsltid=AfmBOopxRo43JFLL-WA1R_1uQRPRY1ZGKYB58rIWLxilaC-aA2HSD7bZ] on 24.10.2025.
  • Bloom, H. (2003). Introduction. In Harold Bloom (Ed. and intr.) Bloom’s modern critical views: Doris Lessing. Chelsea House Publishers.
  • Botting, F. (1999). Gothic. Routledge.
  • Clark, E. (2011). Re-reading horror stories: maternity, disability and narrative in Doris Lessing’s the fifth child. Feminist Review. (98), 173-189. Retrieved from [https://www.jstor.org/stable/41288867?seq=1] on 01.10.2022.
  • Cuddon, J. A. (1998). The penguin dictionary of literary terms and literary theory. (6th Edition). England: Penguin Books Ltd.
  • Day, W. P. (1985). In the circles of fear and desire: a study of gothic fantasy. The University of Chicago Press, Ltd.
  • De Vinne, C. (2012). The ‘uncanny’ unnamable in Doris Lessing’s the fifth child and Ben, in the world. Names A journal of onomastics, 60(1), 15-25. Retrieved from [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272253321_The_’uncanny’_Unnamable_in_Doris_Lessing's_The_Fifth_Child_and_Ben_in_the_World] on 01.01.2025.
  • Fahim, S. S. (1994). Doris Lessing: sufi equilibrium and the form of the novel. The Macmillan Press Ltd.
  • Freud, S. (1919). The ‘uncanny’. [Available online at: https://web.mit.edu/allanmc/www/freud1.pdf], Retrieved on 15.12.2021.
  • Giles, J. (1988). Family-planning at first sight. National review. Retrieved from [https://www.unz.com/print/NationalRev-1988jun1000051/?View=PDF& PDF= NationalRev-1988jun10] on 20.12.2019
  • Groom, N. (2012). The gothic: a very short introduction. Oxford UP. Retrievd from [https://bookclubcat.wordpress.com/2024/03/07/newsletter-41-the-fifth-child/] on 22.12.2024.
  • Kristeva, J. (1982). Powers of horror: an essay on abjection. (Trans. by Leon.S. Roudiez). Columbia University Press.
  • Kuo, C. (2014). An ethical reading of Doris Lessing’s The fifth child and Ben, in the world. Wenshan review of literature and culture, 8(1), 1-27.
  • Lessing, D. (1994). A small personal voice: essays, reviews, interviews. (Ed. and intr. by Paul Schlueter). Harper Collins Publishers Ltd.
  • Lessing, D., (1988). The fifth child. Mackays of Chatham Ltd.
  • Majoul, B. (2016). Doris Lessing: poetics of being and time. Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • Mikics, D. (2007). A new handbook of literary terms. Yale University Press Newsletter 41: The fifth child. (2024). Retrieved from [https://bookclubcat.wordpress.com/2024/03/07/newsletter-41-the-fifth-child/] on 22.12.2024.
  • Quinn, E. (2006). A dictionary of literary and thematic terms. (2nd Edition). Facts On File, Inc.
  • Rowe, M. M. (1994). Women writers: Doris Lessing. Macmillan.
  • Rowen, N. (1990). Frankenstein revisited: Doris Lessing’s the fifth child. The journal of the fantastic in the arts. 2.3 (7), 41-49.
  • Rubenstein, R. (2014). Doris Lessing’s fantastic children. In Alice Ridout & Susan Watkins (Eds.) Doris Lessing: border crossings. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 61-74.
  • Sullivan, D. & Greenberg, J. (2011). Monstrous children as harbingers of mortality: A psychological analysis of Doris Lessing’s the fifth child. Literature interpretation theory, 22(2), 113-133. Doi:10.1080/10436928.2011.572276. Retrieved from [https://doi.org/10.1080/10436928.2011.572276] on 20.20.2020.
  • Watkins, S. (2010). Doris Lessing. Manchester University Press.
  • Whittaker, R. (1988). Modern novelists: Doris Lessing. St. Martin’s Press.
  • Williams, A. (1995). The art of darkness: a poetics of gothic. The University of Chicago Press, Ltd.,
  • Yelin, L. (1998). From the margins of empire: Christina Stead, Doris Lessing, Nadine Gordimer. Cornell University Press.

Gothic Elements and Family Disintegration in Doris Lessing's The Fifth Child

Yıl 2025, Sayı: 14, 159 - 182, 28.12.2025
https://doi.org/10.51540/ijof.1787256

Öz

First appeared in 1988, Doris Lessing’s The Fifth Child is a short novelwhose main action takes place in the1960s and 1970s England. The novel portrays the disruption of the Lovatts’ previously happy and harmonious family life following the birth of their fifth child, Ben, whose abnormal and unsettling nature introduces a Gothic sense of otherness into the domestic sphere. Once seen as a perfect family, the Lovatts begin to disintegrate under the pressure of Ben’s ‘‘uncanny’’ and monstrous presence. What captures the reader’s attention in the novel is not only its subject matter but also Lessing’s modern adaptation of Gothic elements, which she employs to expose the problems of modern society. By employing the horror theme through both the monstrous foetus inside Harriet and the depiction of her son with his unfamiliar, frightening, and monstrous traits and behaviour, Lessing presents, in a modern setting, the horrors and violent situations surrounding the family. Through these Gothic elements, she reveals the deterioration of familial relationships, the destruction of domestic happiness and contentment, and ultimately the collapse of the family. The aim of this study is to identify the Gothic and horror elements in The Fifth Child to reveal how the novel reflects the theme of family disintegration, and the collapse of stability within a seemingly settled household, and the significance of unity and peace for the well-being of family members, particularly the children.

Etik Beyan

Yok

Proje Numarası

Yok

Teşekkür

Yok

Kaynakça

  • Abrams, M. H. (1999). A glossary of literary terms. (7th Edition). Heinle&Heinle
  • Alban, G. M. E. (2016). Parents as a destructive or supportive force in Carter, Murdoch and Lessing. International journal of media culture and literature, 2(4), 27-45.
  • Anievas Gamallo, I. C. (2000). Motherhood and the fear of the other: magic, fable and the gothic in Doris Lessing’s the fifth child. In R. Todd and L. Flora (Eds.). Theme parks, rainforests and sprouting wasteland: European essays on theory and performance in contemporary British fiction. Rodopi. pp. 113-124. Retrieved from [https://brill.com/display/book/9789004454941/B9789004454941_s012.xml?srsltid=AfmBOopxRo43JFLL-WA1R_1uQRPRY1ZGKYB58rIWLxilaC-aA2HSD7bZ] on 24.10.2025.
  • Bloom, H. (2003). Introduction. In Harold Bloom (Ed. and intr.) Bloom’s modern critical views: Doris Lessing. Chelsea House Publishers.
  • Botting, F. (1999). Gothic. Routledge.
  • Clark, E. (2011). Re-reading horror stories: maternity, disability and narrative in Doris Lessing’s the fifth child. Feminist Review. (98), 173-189. Retrieved from [https://www.jstor.org/stable/41288867?seq=1] on 01.10.2022.
  • Cuddon, J. A. (1998). The penguin dictionary of literary terms and literary theory. (6th Edition). England: Penguin Books Ltd.
  • Day, W. P. (1985). In the circles of fear and desire: a study of gothic fantasy. The University of Chicago Press, Ltd.
  • De Vinne, C. (2012). The ‘uncanny’ unnamable in Doris Lessing’s the fifth child and Ben, in the world. Names A journal of onomastics, 60(1), 15-25. Retrieved from [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272253321_The_’uncanny’_Unnamable_in_Doris_Lessing's_The_Fifth_Child_and_Ben_in_the_World] on 01.01.2025.
  • Fahim, S. S. (1994). Doris Lessing: sufi equilibrium and the form of the novel. The Macmillan Press Ltd.
  • Freud, S. (1919). The ‘uncanny’. [Available online at: https://web.mit.edu/allanmc/www/freud1.pdf], Retrieved on 15.12.2021.
  • Giles, J. (1988). Family-planning at first sight. National review. Retrieved from [https://www.unz.com/print/NationalRev-1988jun1000051/?View=PDF& PDF= NationalRev-1988jun10] on 20.12.2019
  • Groom, N. (2012). The gothic: a very short introduction. Oxford UP. Retrievd from [https://bookclubcat.wordpress.com/2024/03/07/newsletter-41-the-fifth-child/] on 22.12.2024.
  • Kristeva, J. (1982). Powers of horror: an essay on abjection. (Trans. by Leon.S. Roudiez). Columbia University Press.
  • Kuo, C. (2014). An ethical reading of Doris Lessing’s The fifth child and Ben, in the world. Wenshan review of literature and culture, 8(1), 1-27.
  • Lessing, D. (1994). A small personal voice: essays, reviews, interviews. (Ed. and intr. by Paul Schlueter). Harper Collins Publishers Ltd.
  • Lessing, D., (1988). The fifth child. Mackays of Chatham Ltd.
  • Majoul, B. (2016). Doris Lessing: poetics of being and time. Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • Mikics, D. (2007). A new handbook of literary terms. Yale University Press Newsletter 41: The fifth child. (2024). Retrieved from [https://bookclubcat.wordpress.com/2024/03/07/newsletter-41-the-fifth-child/] on 22.12.2024.
  • Quinn, E. (2006). A dictionary of literary and thematic terms. (2nd Edition). Facts On File, Inc.
  • Rowe, M. M. (1994). Women writers: Doris Lessing. Macmillan.
  • Rowen, N. (1990). Frankenstein revisited: Doris Lessing’s the fifth child. The journal of the fantastic in the arts. 2.3 (7), 41-49.
  • Rubenstein, R. (2014). Doris Lessing’s fantastic children. In Alice Ridout & Susan Watkins (Eds.) Doris Lessing: border crossings. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 61-74.
  • Sullivan, D. & Greenberg, J. (2011). Monstrous children as harbingers of mortality: A psychological analysis of Doris Lessing’s the fifth child. Literature interpretation theory, 22(2), 113-133. Doi:10.1080/10436928.2011.572276. Retrieved from [https://doi.org/10.1080/10436928.2011.572276] on 20.20.2020.
  • Watkins, S. (2010). Doris Lessing. Manchester University Press.
  • Whittaker, R. (1988). Modern novelists: Doris Lessing. St. Martin’s Press.
  • Williams, A. (1995). The art of darkness: a poetics of gothic. The University of Chicago Press, Ltd.,
  • Yelin, L. (1998). From the margins of empire: Christina Stead, Doris Lessing, Nadine Gordimer. Cornell University Press.
Toplam 28 adet kaynakça vardır.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil İngilizce
Konular İngiliz ve İrlanda Dili, Edebiyatı ve Kültürü
Bölüm Araştırma Makalesi
Yazarlar

Mevlude Zengin 0000-0002-7778-8268

Proje Numarası Yok
Gönderilme Tarihi 19 Eylül 2025
Kabul Tarihi 27 Aralık 2025
Yayımlanma Tarihi 28 Aralık 2025
Yayımlandığı Sayı Yıl 2025 Sayı: 14

Kaynak Göster

APA Zengin, M. (2025). Gothic Elements and Family Disintegration in Doris Lessing’s The Fifth Child. International Journal of Filologia(14), 159-182. https://doi.org/10.51540/ijof.1787256

DERGİPARK Bünyesinde Faaliyet Gösteren International Journal of Filologia (IJOF) Filoloji Alanında Yayımlanan Hakemli ve Bilimsel Bir Dergidir. Dergimiz ulusal ve Uluslararası ölçekli birçok dizinde  taranmaktadır.