Sleep Fictions: A Digital Companion

II.XIII.1 Mirth

Lily's aimless meandering as she chases down the specter of sleep is reminiscent of what Alfred Alvarez, in his cultural study of modern night life, describes as "the great insomniac passeggiata of the modern city":

"[The] a walking validation of our instinctive belief that night is the time when things go wrong and lurch out of proportion, the time when values get turned around and daylight rules no longer apply. Part of the primitive fear of darkness is connect with what happens to use when we sleep. Not only are we vulnerable to intruders and predators, we are also vulnerable to our dreams: to their obdurate strangeness; to the irrationality that seems normal at the time, even inevitable; to the overpowering terrors, griefs, rages and triumphs we did not consciously know we had. And behind all this there are other, more buried anxieties.” He goes on to explain that “For the harried and besieged first men, . . . the routine horrors of the night — vulnerability, loneliness and cold — were compounded by a malign predator with a taste for human flesh" (37). 

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