Skip to main content
AkademIndex

Products

For developers

AkademBasesoonOpen API for the ecosystem
Article

Between Flesh and Miracle: Phenomenological Dimensions of Pain and Healing in The Green Mile

Ulugbek OchilovDepartment of History and Foreign Languages, Asia International University, Bukhara 200100, UzbekistanShuhrat SirojiddinovDepartment of Foreign Philology, Alisher Navo’i Tashkent State University of Uzbek Language and Literature, Tashkent 100174, UzbekistanMuhabbat BaqoyevaInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, UzbekistanFeruza KHAJIEVAInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, UzbekistanOtabek FayzulloyevInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, UzbekistanBakhtiyor GafurovDepartment of English Language, Bukhara State Medical Institute, Bukhara 200118, UzbekistanKakhramon TukhsanovInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, UzbekistanDilnoza SharipovaInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, UzbekistanMakhmud BabaevInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, UzbekistanGulrukh Sharipovna BobokulovaInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, UzbekistanShahnoza KholovaInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, UzbekistanShahnoza TuyboevaInterfaculty Department of Foreign Languages, Bukhara State University, Bukhara 200114, Uzbekistan
Humanitiesjournal2026en
ABI

Abstract

This article examines the interaction between phenomenological illness theory and magical realism in Stephen King’s The Green Mile. It uses ideas from phenomenological psychopathology and illness narrative theory to explain how King presents supernatural events through a restrained and matter-of-fact narrative register. Instead of considering magical realism as a genre or a mere literary device, the article views magical realism as a stylistic mode that is produced by the tension between realistic descriptions and unexplained supernatural moments. Through a close reading of King’s prose, especially his diction, narrative voice and bodily descriptions, this study shows that John Coffey’s healing acts represent the otherwise incommunicable experience of suffering. These supernatural events make visible forms of institutional violence such as prison brutality, racial injustice and execution, which are often invisible in traditional realist narratives. This article also argues that magical realism is not limited to Latin American literature but can function effectively in American popular fiction. Finally, the findings suggest that, while magical realism may be helpful in exposing injustice and suffering, it may also have the danger of aestheticizing pain rather than fully transforming it into political critique.

Topics

Identifiers

Citations and references

Cited by 039 references
Metrics — AkademScholar · Coming soon