Chapter III-V - 2
Chapter III-V - 2
Chapter III-V - 2
In this analysis, the writer uses the theory of psychological disorder that
According to Halgin and Whitbourne (2009: 193), the individual with dissociative
disorder has at least two distinct identities or personality states, each with its own
pattern of perceiving, thinking, and relating, as well as its own style of behavior,
personality states takes control of the person’s behavior. People with dissociative
personality disorder have a primary identity associated with their given name.
This primary identity, or host, is customarily passive and dependent, possibly also
depressed and guilty. The alters are usually strikingly different, possibly acting in
ways that are hostile, demanding, or self-destructive. They may have different
ages, races, levels of intelligence, and affective styles, and that may even be
opposite gender. The transmission from one alter to another is usually sudden,
moment, only one alter interacts with the external environment, although the
others may actively perceive what is happening or influence what is going on.
alter may piece together memories to make up for unaccounted gasp, or an alter
disease are categorized in terms of relevant areas of functioning within what are
individual’s functioning. There are five axes of the DSM-IV-TR), along which
The major clinical disorders are on Axis I. These are called clinical
personality disorders. These are personality traits that are inflexible and
On axis IV, the clinician documents events or pressures that may affect the
the highest level of functioning during the previous year. The rating of the
client’s functioning during the preceding year provides the clinician with
recent past, the clinician more reason to hope for improvement. The
adjustment.
3. Dissociative Disorder
These experiences are common under stress but can occur in the absence of stress
(Morgan & others, 2001) in Lahey (2007: 550). Individual with these disorders
may be unable to recall important personal events or may temporarily forget their
identity or even assume a new identity. They may even wander far from their
usual surroundings.
(multiple personality).
3.1. Depersonalization
feels that he or she has become distorted or “unreal”, or that distortions have
occurred in one’s surroundings. The individual might feel that his hands have
become enlarged or out of control. Or the individual might feel like a robot––even
people. The individual knows that these feelings are not accurate, although they
depersonalization is the sense of leaving one’s body and being able to look at it
depersonalization are rather common, especially in young adults. Unless they are
is an outside observer of, one’s mental processes or body (e.g. feeling like
no one is in a dream)
acute stress disorder, or another dissociative disorder, and is not due to the
usually after some stressful episode. The holes of memory are too extensive to be
Most often the memory loss is for all events during a limited period of
time following some traumatic experience, such as witnessing the death of a loved
one. More rarely the amnesia is for only selected events during circumscribed
covering the person’s entire life. During the period of amnesia, the person’s
behavior is otherwise unremarkable, except that the memory loss may bring some
disorientation and purposeless wandering. With total amnesia the patient does not
recognize relatives and friends, but retains the ability to talk, read, and reason and
perhaps retains talents and previously acquired knowledge of the world and how
to function in it. The amnesic episode may last several hours or as long as several
years. It usually disappears as suddenly as it came on, with complete recovery and
substance abuse. But amnesia and memory loss caused by a brain disease or
memory fails slowly over time and is not linked to life stress. Memory loss
substance abuse can be easily linked to the trauma or the substance being abuse.
Dissociative fugue states are rare conditions that are resemble amnesia in
that there is a loss of memory, but loss is so complete that the individual cannot
remember his or her identity or previous life. The fugue episode is also typified by
a period of “wandering” that may take the individual around the corner or across
during the fugue episode, usually one that is more sociable, more fun-loving and
less conventional than the previous one. Sometimes the assumption of the new
identity can be quite elaborate, with the person taking on a new name, new home,
in establishing a fairly complex social life, all without questioning the inability to
remember the past. More often, however, the new life does not crystallize to this
extent and the fugue is of briefer duration. It consists for the most part of limited,
but apparently purposeful, travel, during which social contacts are minimal or
absent. Fugues typically occur after a person had experienced some severe stress,
Recovery, although varying in the time it takes, is usually complete; the individual
does not recollect what took place during the flight from his or her usual haunts.
home or one’s customary place of work, with inability to recall one’s past
or complete)
requires that a person have at least two separate ego states, or alters, different
modes of being and feeling and acting that exist independently of each other,
coming forth and being in control at different times. Gasp in memory are also
common and are produces at least one alter has no contact with the other; that is,
alter A has no memory for what alter B is like, or even any knowledge of having
cannot be a temporary change resulting from the ingestion of a drug, for example.
Each alter is fully integrated and complex with its own behavior patterns,
memories, and relationships: each determines the nature and acts of the individual
when it is in command. Usually the personalities are quite different, even opposite
of one another. Indeed, they may have different handedness, wear glasses with
different perceptions, and have allergies to different substances. The original and
subordinate alters are all aware of lost periods of time, and the voices of the others
may sometimes echo into their consciousness, even though they do not know to
whom these voices belong. When an individual has more than two alters, each of
these may to some extent be aware of others. In fact, they may talk to each other
rarely diagnosed until adolescence. It is more chronic and serious than other
with its own relatively enduring pattern of perceiving, relating to, and
Ashley Patterson is twenty eight years old. She is neatly dressed, with
patrician features, a slim figure and intelligent, has brown eyes. She is elegant and
very attractive. Her dark hair falls softly to her shoulders. She had grown up in
Bedford, Pennsylvania. Her father had been head of one of the top one hundred
hospitals in the country. But in the recent of three years, she has been living in an
completely different personality in one body — which make her divided into three
trauma, where she shut out the trauma by creating another identity. She was raped
by her own father when she was six years old. It happened when she and her
father were in London. As they got home, she told her mother about what had
happened to her, and her mother called her as a liar. Since that time her mother
hated her.
Ashley losses her memory for several times and she does not realize on
what has happened while her body was taken over by her other identity. She feels
that someone is following her and wants to kill her. In one night she called a
policeman to stay at her apartment because she is too afraid being in a terror.
Ashley is accused as a murderer that she feels she never done. She is told
that she has done five murders. She tries hard telling everyone that she is not the
murderer but no one believes her because the police have the identical proof or
the evidence points to the same woman being involved in all cases. Then, she is
One of the murdered victims is Jim Cleary who was in love with Ashley
and she also loves him. Her father prohibits her to have a relationship with Jim
Cleary. Lately she finds that Jim Cleary is murdered and she thinks that her father
“I—I found out that the day after you and I left for
London, Jim Cleary’s body . . . was found. He had
been stabbed . . . and castrated.” She sat there,
watching him, waiting for a reaction.”
Dr. Patterson frowned. “Cleary? Oh, yes. That boy
who was panting after you. I saved you from him,
didn’t I?”
Ashley only knows that she often loses time. The experience of losing
time is almost happened in everyday. She often finds that something has changed
without her knowing and she also finds that she has done something that she does
not. It makes her confuse and she thinks that someone has done those things to
her.
Ashley has no memory for what happened to her sometimes. She can be in
a place where she never plans to go. She wears a dress which she does not use to.
Those events are often happened but she cannot tell anybody because she has no
Ashley feels afraid in knowing that there are other identities that live in her
body. She is too afraid because she cannot control if her other identities do
something that she does not want to. She cannot face the reality of other identities
live in her body and caused some murders and she is so hopeless that makes her
Personality. He is attracted to her and during her crisis he also feels her pain and
wants to comfort her. After a long treatment, the doctor finds that Ashley its cure,
but actually she is not. It is a part of Toni’s plan that no one knows that she hides
in Ashley. Ashley leaves the asylum for home. She still harbors her hatred for her
father and still Toni resides in her. She is on the way to kill her father.
she is known to have other identities or alters who play special role in Ashley’s
life and trauma. Below is the analysis of the character of Ashley’s other identities,
they are :
stunningly beautiful, depending on her mood or how she is feeling about herself.
But she is never simply pretty. Part of her charm is that she is completely unaware
of her looks. She is shy and soft-spoken, with gentleness that she is almost an
Alette first existence is when Ashley eight years old in Roma. She is
created to stand up for Ashley. She comes in order to protect Ashley because
Ashley was too afraid for her father who raped her one night.
Because Alette was born in Roma, she has a musical Italian accent. She
Alette is really unique because her senses are tuned to the nuances of
colors that everything she feels, see, smell and hear, she can describe it into
colors. She likes to spend her times to visit the museum especially museum of art.
She loves painting and wants desperately to be an artist, although she knows that
her mother really hates her and never supports for what she does.
“I like to paint.”
“We’ll have to get you some paints.”
“No!”
“Why?”
“I don’t want to.” What do you call that, child? It
looks like an ugly blob to me.”
(Sheldon. Tell Me Your Dreams. 1998 : 299-300)
alienation from others. Her mood swings always catch her unaware, and in an
instant, she goes from a blissful euphoria to a desperate misery. She has no control
over her emotion. Toni is the only one with whom Alette would discuss her
problems. Toni always has a solution for everything, and it is usually to go and
Alette’s has a changing mood that she cannot control sometimes. The
smallest slights, whether intended or not, it will drive Alette into a rage. When the
black cloud descended, Alette sometimes imagines people on the street having
heart attacks or being struck by automobiles or being mugged and killed. She
would play the scenes out in her mind, and they were vividly real. A moment
later, she feels shame. However, on her good days, she is a completely different
only thing that spoiled her happiness is the knowledge that the darkness would
Alette always goes to church in every Sunday morning. The church has
volunteer programs to feed the homeless, to teach after-school art lessons and to
tutor students and she will involve the program and lead children’s Sunday school
classes and help in the nursery. She volunteers for all the charitable activities and
devote as much time as she could to them. She particularly enjoys giving painting
in the court as the witness but Toni prohibits her. Toni also prohibits Alette to talk
to Ashley. Actually, Alette is never hate Ashley but she is just a little bit afraid of
Toni. She always gives in to Toni because she considers Toni as her friend and as
Tony Prescott is 22 years old, impish, vivacious, and daring. She is half
smoldering, half firecracker. Her face is puckishly heart shaped; her eyes are
mischievous brown, her figure alluring. She was born in London and she speaks
with delightful British accent. She is athletic and loves sports, particularly winter
Going to college in London, she dresses conservatively during the day, but
at night, she wears miniskirts and disco gear and makes the swinging rounds. She
has a beautiful voice, sultry and at some of the clubs, she plays the piano and
sings, and the patrons will cheer her. She is an aggressive woman; she loves to
have fun and goes to the party. That is when she feels most alive. She does not
Toni hates her mother inside. She hates her for what she told her and
Toni and Alette generally maintain a friendship and Toni’s favorite subject
Toni is the dominant alter than Alette. She is tricky and she has a control
to Alette, she always has a plan for them and she likes to tell Alette for what she
Toni considers that she is the murderer of five men and she is who actually
responsible to the five murders. She has no regret for what she has done because
she is aware that she is a part of Ashley’s mind. Even Toni is emerged somehow,
but she does not really exist. People know her as Ashley, and she places the blame
on Ashley.
Toni accuses that she only wants to protect Ashley. She really hates her
father for what he has done to Ashley. She has a feeling that when she kills a man,
she feels that she is killing her father. She still has hatred to her father.
5.1 CONCLUSION
Based on the analysis described in chapter IV, the writer concludes that:
In analyzing the main character of the novel, the writer uses the
psychological approach. The main character of the novel is Ashley Patterson who
is a beautiful, smart, nice woman but because of her childhood trauma has made
her suffers a mental illness namely dissociative identity disorder or also known as
personalities in one body — which make her has other identities that are really
different to her real personality. She was accused to be the murderer of five men
that actually her other identities did. But because she was proved to have a mental
illness then she was put in an asylum in order to get a treatment. After getting a
therapy, the doctor claimed that Ashley has cured but actually she is not. She still
harbors her hatred for her father and still Toni resides in her that she wants to kill
her father.
The writer finds that each person has different personality that makes
him/her different to others. No one has the same personality. It is also found that
human characters have its good and bad traits. But then it is depending on the
conditions that changed them. The writer finds that Ashley has two other
identities or alters namely Alette Peters and Toni Prescott. Each alter has different
personality that makes her different to others. As it seen in the analysis that
Toni has a bad character; brave, tricky, she bears a grudge, and she is a murderer.
She is more dominant than Alette and she is talented in singing. While Alette’s
character is religious, shy, soft spoken, moody, modest but she is talented in
paintings.
mysterious case that rarely happened though it exists. In this analysis, multiple
personality happened because the victim was abused by the parents that leave a
trauma.
5.2 SUGGESTION
Through this thesis, the writer suggests that by reading this novel, the
reader can open his/her mind to have a consideration that it is important to treat a
very important role to the growth of the child, especially for the child’s character
to mold personality and also give much influence to the development of child’s
personality. As the novel tells that a bad treat from the parents can cause a bad
effect to the child, in this case Ashley Patterson who suffers from multiple
personality. It is important for parents to take a good care of their child and to
treat the child good in order to avoid from what is experienced by Ashley
whether he/she suffers from multiple personality or not because this kind of