Popular Culture Review Vol. 24, No. 1, Winter 2013 | Page 53

King’s Psychological Gothicism 49 his unsuccessfiil ambition and of his incapacity to answer the most haunting question: “Who and what am I?” or “Who is Mort Rainey?” Instead of moving forward in order to (re)define himself through the creation of a new private and active Professional life, Mort tums backward towards the past: his life with Amy and the proof of authorship of the short story “Secret Window, Secret Garden.” As Jack Torrance needs to explore the past of the Overlook Hotel, almost perfectly locked away in “secret” boxes in the hotel’s cellar, Mort is possessed to reveal John Shooter’s identity and history. In this process, Mort rediscovers his own history, which first breaks through in the author’s scary dreams, but then also becomes apparent in his diumal life in the form of bodily illusions of his double, John Shooter. As soon as Shooter has gained omnipresence in Mort’s life, Mort’s surrounding transforms into an uncanny place of utmost unfamiliarity, in which everything known and safe becomes unknown and frightening. Mort descends into a state of “psychotic decompensation” (Levin 492), which manifests itself in his DID, producing Mort’s mood Swings, aggressiveness, derealization, and “unusual perceptual experiences” (Dobbert 25). Whereas Jack Torrance in The Shining slowly realizes that his chosen environment of the Overlook Hotel does not foster but rather hinders his productivity, stirs his repressed longing for alcohol, and negatively transforms his family life, Mort lacks any understanding of his emotional or mental state. He suffers increasingly from self-alienation, night terrors, and repetitious parasomniac behavior. Mort’s progressing self-alienation indicates his affliction with profound depersonalization, which Michelle Lambert defines as “an experience of feeling detached from [oneself]” (Lambert 141) to the degree that one becomes “an outside observer of one’s mental processes or body” (Lambert 141). As the analysis of Mort’s dreams and of his daily routine has shown, the young author faces several out-of-body experiences. These, in combination with the increase of his “unfocused rage” (King, Window 261), provoke his lurid parasomniac activities, such as nailing his cat Bump to a trashcan, killing his two friends Greg Carstairs and Tom Greenleaf with a screwdriver, driving two and a half hours to bum down Amy’s house, and destroying the bathroom in his summer house. Like the narrator of Poe’s “The Black Cat” (1843), Mort is compelled to kill his cat, since it is a living reminder of his once emotionally rieh married life. Mort falsely assumes that the cat’s death will enable him to repress and negate the still existing emotions for his ex-wife, without realizing “that repression of the softer tendencies will reinforce the aggressive ones, making them all the more compulsive” (Homey 71). King illustrates the psychological reinforcement of Mort’s aggressive tendencies further through the brutal murder of his two friends Tom Greenleaf and Greg Carstairs. Their deaths are inevitable, as they are about to discover Mort’s mental and emotional instability, and the real reason for the existence of the bodily illusion of John Shooter—