Socialist Propaganda in the Twentieth-century British Novel |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 68
Page 96
... Writing that The Wild Goose Chase first saw print in the form of the self - explanatory episode , ' The Football Match ... written from a Marxist or near - Marxist viewpoint ; ... no modern book can be true to life unless it recognises ...
... Writing that The Wild Goose Chase first saw print in the form of the self - explanatory episode , ' The Football Match ... written from a Marxist or near - Marxist viewpoint ; ... no modern book can be true to life unless it recognises ...
Page 104
... written a number of historical novels before 1936 , but it was only from this year that he started writing in support of the Communist cause . ( January , 1936 , is the date when , as he puts it , he ' really reached bedrock .... 120 ) ...
... written a number of historical novels before 1936 , but it was only from this year that he started writing in support of the Communist cause . ( January , 1936 , is the date when , as he puts it , he ' really reached bedrock .... 120 ) ...
Page 154
... writing tracts , for example , or standing on soap - boxes - this is certainly not to reject everything that has been written . Quite apart from their often considerable sociological value - as in the way they consciously or ...
... writing tracts , for example , or standing on soap - boxes - this is certainly not to reject everything that has been written . Quite apart from their often considerable sociological value - as in the way they consciously or ...
Contents
The Philanthropists of Mugsborough | 27 |
At Last the British are Coming | 48 |
The MiddleClass Dilemma | 79 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Socialist Propaganda in the Twentieth-Century British Novel Dr David Smith, PhD No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
appeared attempt attitude beliefs Blatchford bourgeois Britain British Communist Party Capitalism certainly characters Chris Chris's Christian Communism contemporary Cwmardy despite edition Edward Upward England English Ethel Mannin Ewan example expressed Fabian fact Fascist father feels fiction fighting finally George Grassic Gibbon Grey Granite Harry hero Heslop historical Ibid ideology intellectual involved Jack Lindsay John Kinraddie Labour Party Last Cage later leader Left Review left-wing Lewis Grassic Lewis Grassic Gibbon Lindsay's literary Literature lives London MacKelvie Marxist Masses middle-class miners movement Mugsborough Naomi Mitchison never novelist Olive Field organised passion Pelling perhaps political proletarian propaganda published radical Ragged Trousered Philanthropists realises remains revolution revolutionary novels Robert Robert Tressell Scots Quair seems seen sense Socialism Socialist society Spain story Strike struggle Sunset Song sympathy thirties thought tracts Tressell Tressell's Utopia Warner Wells's Wild Goose Chase workers working-class writer young