Tradition and Dream: The English and American Novel from the Twenties to Our TimeDen engelske og amerikanske novelle fra 1920 til 1960 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 73
Page 271
... feel can stand for the actual society being criticized , as for example the worlds depicted in Our Mutual Friend and ... feels this she is no longer plausible as a symbol of evil . At the same time , Sands , who is at the heart of the ...
... feel can stand for the actual society being criticized , as for example the worlds depicted in Our Mutual Friend and ... feels this she is no longer plausible as a symbol of evil . At the same time , Sands , who is at the heart of the ...
Page 322
... feel pretty sure that if his book , The Literary Situation , were appearing now , he would add Bernard Malamud . It is ... feels that he is living in a void and has given up his job , ostensibly in order to study the philosophy of the ...
... feel pretty sure that if his book , The Literary Situation , were appearing now , he would add Bernard Malamud . It is ... feels that he is living in a void and has given up his job , ostensibly in order to study the philosophy of the ...
Page 324
... feels it as an element permeating the characters . One feels this , too , in The Victim : Bellow is a novelist of urban man , particularly of the American as urban man . The Victim is more complex than Dangling Man , though at its ...
... feels it as an element permeating the characters . One feels this , too , in The Victim : Bellow is a novelist of urban man , particularly of the American as urban man . The Victim is more complex than Dangling Man , though at its ...
Contents
British I | 1 |
American | 65 |
The Southern Novel Between the Wars | 108 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action Afternoon Men American fiction American novel appeared attitude become behaviour called centre comedy comic Communist Compson consciousness contemporary criticism death described dream Dreiser E. M. Forster Eliot Ellen Glasgow England English novel Eustace everything existence experience expression eyes fantasy father Faulkner feels figure Gatsby George Eliot girl Gopher Prairie hero homosexual human imagination innocent Jane Austen Joyce Lawrence Lewis literary lives Lonigan look means mind Miss Lonelyhearts moral narrator nature Negro never night novelist perhaps political Powys's prose realize relation rendered satire scarcely scene seems sense social society Sons and Lovers South story Studs Studs Lonigan style successful Sutpen symbol theme things thirties tion tradition tragic Ulysses Vile Bodies Virginia whole wife Willa Cather Winesburg woman women Women in Love words writing written young