Traversing the Aleph: A Journey Through Time, Self, and Spiritual Awakening in Paulo Coelho’s Aleph
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18493491
Keywords:
spiritual journey, reincarnation, karma, self-discovery, metafictionAbstract
The book Aleph (2011) by Paulo Coelho can be considered the turning point in the author's literary work, as it marks a shift toward overt spiritual self-examination presented through the lens of autobiographical fiction. The story of the Trans-Siberian Railway frames the novel. It follows a spiritually burned-out author who seeks to revive himself on the journey and meets a woman connected to his unresolved past. The story's central idea is the so-called Aleph. In this spiritual locus, time, memory, and consciousness intersect, enabling the protagonist to confront guilt, karmic debt, and emotional trauma from an earlier life. The present paper provides a critical analysis of Aleph, employing an interdisciplinary approach that draws on spiritual philosophy, psychoanalytic theory, and narrative criticism. It claims that the novel goes beyond its apparent simplicity to express a sustained reflection on forgiveness, moral accountability, and self-change. Placing Aleph in the context of Eastern metaphysics, Christian mysticism, and postmodern life-writing, the analysis reveals that the narrative Coelho offers is a therapeutic work in which confession becomes a spiritual and therapeutic practice.
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