Like many quasi-autobiographical first novels, Fear of Flying is a bildungsroman whose central theme is the search for self-discovery. Isadora Wing re-examines and reinterprets her personal history in an effort to define herself as a daughter, a woman, a Jew and a writer. Structurally and philosophically the process resembles psychoanalysis — but traditional psychiatry is also a focus of the book's iconoclasm. The psychoanalysts Isadora knows operate on the basis of theoretical abstractions that have little connection to life as she sees it. Isadora examines her history in order to discover meanings that grow from her own intelligence and her experience as a woman in a particular society.
The title works on several levels.
Isadora is literally afraid of flying — afraid of losing control, of trusting her life to others, of technology as.....
This is a free excerpt of 135 words. This section contains 269 words. This
Short Guide contains 1,230 words (approx. 4 pages at 300
words per page).
Read the rest of this Short Guide with our Fear of Flying Access Pass.