A Study of Brian Moore’s Hallucinatory Technique in Fergus

Abstract

Hallucinatory realism is a term that has been used in connection with the concept of magical realism in literature . Hallucinatory realism is more specific. I is defined as " a dream-state , where the imaginary universe seems concrete and believable" . Fergus (1970) is one of Brian Moore's novels characterized by innovation in the style of narration and plot structure . From Moore 's perspective , the traditional realistic approach and the modern consciousness method appear to be insufficient for presenting the full dimensions of the crises of an artist-hero in exile . Accordingly, he adopts the hallucinatory technique or Hallucinatory realism in the novel in which the actual world of the hero is inhabited by visiting ghosts and spirits of dead people from his past life in Ireland. The past impinges on the suffocating present not in forms of actual remembrances or recollections , but through the protagonist's imaginative recreation of it in terms of hallucination , which in turn highlights the true nature of the sacrifices in the artist's aesthetic talents and past heritage for the media, fame and publicity . Keywords: Artist–Hero Conflict , Mass–Media , Hallucinatory Realism, Metaphysical Journey to the Past, Self- Redemption

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