Susie’s Double Traumas: A Psychological Study of The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36586/jcl.2.2026.0.54.0088Keywords:
The Lovely Bones, Susie, Double Traumas, the Psychological Approach, Alice SeboldAbstract
This paper, “Susie’s double traumas: A psychological study of The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold,” focuses on recurrent universal issues, which are rape and rape trauma. American writer Alice Sebold, who suffered such trauma, wrote The Lovely Bones in 2002 to address this dilemma. Susie, the novel's fourteen-year-old protagonist, lived happily with her family before the tragic day when Mr. Harvey violated her and murdered her to escape legal consequences. The study concludes, through a qualitative deductive psychological approach, specifically Kübler-Ross’s five stages of grief, that Susie suffered from two double traumas: rape trauma and murder trauma. Fortunately, she copes with both traumas separately and successfully, aided by the love of her family and the support of her companions in heaven. This highlights the importance of emotional support for rape victims during the healing journey.
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