Two main themes can be found in the Dream: a rejection of
realism in characters and the novel itself; and an anti-feminism, or perhaps an anti-sexuality, disavowing the possibility of sexual relations. The narrator explicitly criticises such realist figures as
Balzac and
Jane Austen, for their rigid characters and spurious novelistic coherence; but also challenges
Proust’s exploitation of involuntary memory, and his metaphoric method of approach. At the same time, the work is concerned with a sense of the body as a machine that is broken; and with male sexuality as oscillating between
Apollo and
Narcissus. “We give you one term of Apollo: chasing a bitch, the usual bitch. And one term of Narcissus: running away from one”. Both themes come together in a rejection both of a realist world, and of a unified self to be found in sexual relations. ==See also==