Here is a simple definition of this technique
"STREAM
OF CONSCIOUSNESS: Writing in which a character's perceptions,
thoughts, and memories are presented in an apparently random
form, without regard for logical sequence, chronology, or syntax.
Often such writing makes no distinction between various levels
of reality—such as dreams, memories, imaginative thoughts or
real sensory perception. William James coined the phrase "stream
of consciousness" in his Principles of Psychology
(1890). The technique has been used by several authors and poets:
Katherine Anne Porter, Dorothy Richardson, James Joyce, Virginia
Woolf, Dorothy Richardson, T. S. Eliot, and William Faulkner.
Some critics treat the interior
monologue as
a subset of the more general category, stream of consciousness.
Although interior monologues by earlier writers share some similarities
with stream of consciousness, the first clear appearance is
in Edouard Dujardin's Les lauriers sont coupés
(The Laurels Have Been Cut, 1888). Perhaps the most famous
example is the stream of consciousness section in James Joyce's
Ulysses, which climaxes in a forty-odd page interior
monologue of Molly Bloom, an extended passage with only one
punctuation mark."
http://web.cn.edu/kwheeler/lit_terms_S.html
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