The Premonitory Dream: A Freudian Reading of Colleen Hoover's Verity.

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Bibin Jossy. J, Dr. R. Hema Latha

Abstract

Dreams are described as a series of actions that are inaccessible in the active condition of human existence. It has numerous dimensions. It gets its content from reality, as Freud believed. But, as Verity's brief life shown, premonitory dreams can be implanted in the deepest recesses of people's hearts and have profound consequences. Colleen Hoover's Verity is a thriller mystery. Verity encounters with an accident and gets paralysed while working on her literary series, The Noble Virtues. When it comes to her literary profession, Lowen has been tasked with completing the assignment. The writer then comes upon Verity's autobiography while looking for references for her incomplete work. The plot then takes the listener on an even darker journey. Verity's involvement in the deaths of her own children is revealed. By illustrating Freudian interpretative theory on dreams, this study focuses on a range of Verity's endangered ill wills and attempts to determine how far the dreams might cause this mother to disregard her own children, forcing them to die. To summarise, it investigates how individuals' repressed thoughts are portrayed through dreams, as well as how childhood and upbringing influence how people see their surroundings.

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