DOI: 10.18848/2327-7912/cgp/a389 ISSN: 2327-8676

Confronting the Abyss

Sharifuzzaman ., Md. Atiqur Rahman
<p class="ql-align-justify">This study investigates William Golding’s <em>Pincher Martin</em> as an insightful allegory of the modern man’s existential struggle, exploring themes of isolation, identity, and moral disintegration. Through the character of Christopher Hadley Martin, Golding constructs a psychologically intense narrative that reflects the spiritual and moral crisis of twentieth-century Europe. Marooned in a hostile and indifferent environment, Martin becomes a symbol of the modern individual—severed from collective belief systems, consumed by ego, and driven by an instinctive will to survive at all costs. His descent into psychological torment and denial of death represents a confrontation with the abyss: a confrontation with meaninglessness, spiritual emptiness, and the failure of individualism to provide salvation. This article argues that Martin’s struggle captures the fragmented condition of the modern man, revealing the collapse of moral frameworks and the existential burden of selfhood. In doing so, this research critiques the human cost of a civilization cut off from transcendence and ethical grounding.</p>

More from our Archive