A STUDY OF TRAUMA AND EMOTIONAL ALIENATION IN THE LAST HOUSE ON NEEDLESS STREET
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63878/qrjs930Abstract
Catriona Ward’s The Last House on Needless Street (2021) presents a disturbing exploration of childhood maltreatment and its enduring psychological consequences, foregrounding trauma as a structuring force of narrative and subjectivity. While existing criticism has largely emphasized the novel’s Gothic aesthetics, narrative unreliability, and genre subversion, less attention has been paid to its sustained engagement with psychological trauma and trauma-induced alienation. This article addresses that gap by offering a trauma-theoretical reading of the novel, drawing on foundational insights from Cathy Caruth, Judith Herman, and Bessel van der Kolk. Using qualitative textual analysis, the study examines how experiences of childhood abuse and neglect generate dissociation, fragmented identity, and profound social withdrawal in the traumatized subject. The analysis demonstrates that the novel’s disjointed narrative structure, shifting perspectives, and silences formally replicate the workings of traumatic memory, particularly its belatedness and resistance to coherent representation. Ward’s portrayal of alienation is read not as inherent deviance or monstrosity but as a psychological survival response to sustained maltreatment. By situating The Last House on Needless Street within contemporary trauma fiction, this article argues that the novel challenges moralized readings of trauma victims and exposes the long-term effects of abuse on identity, relationality, and self-perception. The study contributes to trauma studies and contemporary Gothic scholarship by highlighting how trauma theory provides a critical framework for understanding both the novel’s thematic concerns and its fragmented narrative form.

