![]() Taking Poe’s tale as a case in point, this article is aimed at depicting the process of cultural stigmatisation and victimisation of the aged, as well as the unconscious social remorse in nineteenth-century America, as a reflection of the country’s process of growth. His crime, feeling both released from his obligations and tormented by his guilt. The narrator experiences both freedom and remorse as a result of ![]() ![]() ![]() In Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart” (1843), a young narrator acknowledges both his love and contempt for an old man whom he watches over, as he permanently feels the overwhelming perpetual vigilance the old man’s Evil Eye exerts over him, which ultimately urges the narrator to murder his senior. Edgar Allan Poe depicted the victimisation and stigmatisation of the elderly as a reflection of the American ambivalent perceptions towards the ageing population in mid-nineteenth-century. ![]() The change of perception towards youth and age, and by extension, towards national dependence and independence, can be significantly detected in the cultural and literary discourses of nineteenth-century America. ![]()
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