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When Melody and Drama Collide: The Use of Melodramatic in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway

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Mrs. Dalloway, the early twentieth century novel by Virginia Woolf, paints a picture of the London in one day in the 1920’s. It primarily focuses on the titular character getting ready for a party, and her friends and family coming to the party later in the ending. the only major exception to this is Septimus Smith, a World War I veteran, dealing with the Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder that he gained during the war. The passages that describe Septimus are apocalyptic and devastating to see a man completely unwound like Septimus. By the end of the novel Septimus kills himself by throwing him out of his house and onto spikes. The author describes this jump as melodramatic. The use of melodramatic in it’s original context compared to the overwrought use of the word in the novel and in contemporary life helps look at Septimus and other characters, like Peter and Sally, in two different ways an insincere way like the current use of the word and one looking for magic and happy endings in a world completely devoid of theml. Melodramatic originally meant having to do with melodramas or plays with singing and acting in them. The melo for the use of songs in the plays, and the drama describing the plays themselves. The current use of the word, and the one used in this novel is an overwrought and sensationalized act or way of speaking. The original definition brings to mind a sense of walking around with beautiful music, and life being like a play in both it’s perfection, the lovers

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