### Stream of Consciousness in Literature
#### Introduction
Stream of attention is a story mode that seeks to seize the myriad
thoughts and feelings which pass via the thoughts. Unlike traditional
narrative strategies that gift occasions in a logical series, movement of
awareness often gives those thoughts in a seemingly unstructured,
chaotic manner, mimicking the natural drift of human focus.
#### Historical Development
**Early Influences**
- The roots of stream of focus may be traced returned to early works that
delved into characters' inner studies, such as Laurence Sterne's "Tristram
Shandy" and James Hogg's "The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a
Justified Sinner."
**Philosophical Foundations**
- The term itself became first coined via psychologist William James in his
1890 work "The Principles of Psychology." James defined recognition as a
non-stop waft, a "river" or a "movement," influencing literary
experimentation.
**Early twentieth Century and Modernism**
- The technique received prominence with the rise of Modernism within
the early 20th century, reflecting a shift away from linear narratives to
explore greater complicated internal reviews. Authors like James Joyce,
Virginia Woolf, and Marcel Proust became important figures.
#### Key Authors and Works
#### Introduction
Stream of attention is a story mode that seeks to seize the myriad
thoughts and feelings which pass via the thoughts. Unlike traditional
narrative strategies that gift occasions in a logical series, movement of
awareness often gives those thoughts in a seemingly unstructured,
chaotic manner, mimicking the natural drift of human focus.
#### Historical Development
**Early Influences**
- The roots of stream of focus may be traced returned to early works that
delved into characters' inner studies, such as Laurence Sterne's "Tristram
Shandy" and James Hogg's "The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a
Justified Sinner."
**Philosophical Foundations**
- The term itself became first coined via psychologist William James in his
1890 work "The Principles of Psychology." James defined recognition as a
non-stop waft, a "river" or a "movement," influencing literary
experimentation.
**Early twentieth Century and Modernism**
- The technique received prominence with the rise of Modernism within
the early 20th century, reflecting a shift away from linear narratives to
explore greater complicated internal reviews. Authors like James Joyce,
Virginia Woolf, and Marcel Proust became important figures.
#### Key Authors and Works