The Art of Narrative Distortion

Manipulating Time, Space, and Psyche in Poe’s Short Stories

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32674/7rqsta97

Keywords:

Edgar Allan Poe, fragmented storytelling, gothic fiction, temporal distortion, unreliable narration

Abstract

This study explores the narrative techniques of unreliable narration in Edgar Allan Poe’s short stories “Ligeia”, “The Pit and the Pendulum,” and “Manuscript Found in a Bottle.” It investigates how Poe’s narrators distort time, space, and psychological perception to construct narrative ambiguity and disorientation amongst the readers. Drawing upon Wayne C. Booth’s theory of rhetorical narration and Gerard Genette’s narrative structural analysis, this study demonstrates that Poe’s narrators do not just merely mislead readers but rather actively immerse them in psychological disorientation and narrative ambiguity. Ultimately, Poe’s strategic use of unreliable narration emerges not as a narrative flaw but as a deliberate technique that deepens thematic complexity and reinforces Gothic conventions of instability and uncertainty. The findings contribute to broader discussions on the evolution of unreliable narration in psychological and Gothic fiction and reaffirm Poe’s pioneering role in shaping
modern narrative practices.

Author Biography

  • Anusuya Aryal, St. Xavier’s College, Kathmandu, Nepal

    Anusuya Aryal is a psychology graduate from St. Xavier’s College, Nepal, whose work explores the intertwined worlds of cognition, culture, and the psychological depths of storytelling. With an academic foundation in both Psychology and English literature, she examines how narrative, philosophical psychology, and culturally rooted frameworks shape emotional and clinical well-being. She has facilitated community mental-health workshops across diverse communities, supported child and youth psychosocial programs, and is especially interested in bridging Eastern philosophical wisdom with contemporary psychological science. 

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Published

2025-12-31

How to Cite

The Art of Narrative Distortion: Manipulating Time, Space, and Psyche in Poe’s Short Stories. (2025). Journal of Innovation in Academia , 4(2), 204-218. https://doi.org/10.32674/7rqsta97