Sleep — Doctor
Stephen King’s Doctor Sleep (2013) has often been critically framed as a muted echo of its predecessor, The Shining (1977). This paper argues, however, that Doctor Sleep performs a distinct and culturally significant thematic inversion: it transforms the isolated, paternalistic horror of the Overlook Hotel into a communal, restorative narrative about addiction recovery and intergenerational mentorship. By analyzing protagonist Dan Torrance’s journey from a haunted, alcoholic drifter to a hospice caregiver and protector of the young “steam” emitter Abra Stone, this paper explores three central axes: (1) the novel’s use of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) philosophy as a narrative structure to displace the supernatural curse of the shining; (2) the redefinition of psychic vampirism—through the True Knot—as a metaphor for exploitative consumption versus ethical stewardship of paranormal gifts; and (3) the remediation of The Shining ’s core trauma (the father’s violent failure) into a narrative of reparative fatherhood. Ultimately, Doctor Sleep suggests that the horror of the shining is not its existence but its isolation, and that recovery is an active, collective, and narrative-driven process rather than a singular exorcism.
The Shine of Recovery: Trauma, Addiction, and the Ethics of Psychic Vampirism in Stephen King’s Doctor Sleep Doctor Sleep
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Stephen King’s Doctor Sleep (2013) has often been critically framed as a muted echo of its predecessor, The Shining (1977). This paper argues, however, that Doctor Sleep performs a distinct and culturally significant thematic inversion: it transforms the isolated, paternalistic horror of the Overlook Hotel into a communal, restorative narrative about addiction recovery and intergenerational mentorship. By analyzing protagonist Dan Torrance’s journey from a haunted, alcoholic drifter to a hospice caregiver and protector of the young “steam” emitter Abra Stone, this paper explores three central axes: (1) the novel’s use of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) philosophy as a narrative structure to displace the supernatural curse of the shining; (2) the redefinition of psychic vampirism—through the True Knot—as a metaphor for exploitative consumption versus ethical stewardship of paranormal gifts; and (3) the remediation of The Shining ’s core trauma (the father’s violent failure) into a narrative of reparative fatherhood. Ultimately, Doctor Sleep suggests that the horror of the shining is not its existence but its isolation, and that recovery is an active, collective, and narrative-driven process rather than a singular exorcism.
The Shine of Recovery: Trauma, Addiction, and the Ethics of Psychic Vampirism in Stephen King’s Doctor Sleep