The Situation of the Novel |
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Page 14
... language of the western bourgeosie from Richardson to Thomas Mann . In it , the dreams and nightmares of the mercantile ethic , of middle - class privacy , and of the monetary - sexual conflicts and delights of industrial society have ...
... language of the western bourgeosie from Richardson to Thomas Mann . In it , the dreams and nightmares of the mercantile ethic , of middle - class privacy , and of the monetary - sexual conflicts and delights of industrial society have ...
Page 40
... language that the central paradox of Beckett's art resides : his humanoids all have a very cultivated and fluent way of expressing themselves . They are also , even in extremis , irresistably comic : it may be that in the English ...
... language that the central paradox of Beckett's art resides : his humanoids all have a very cultivated and fluent way of expressing themselves . They are also , even in extremis , irresistably comic : it may be that in the English ...
Page 91
... language shared by reader , characters , and author necessarily limits the possible shapes that action , persons , and language itself can assume . ( 1967 : pp . 13-14 ) I do not know whether Poirier realised it , but these words read ...
... language shared by reader , characters , and author necessarily limits the possible shapes that action , persons , and language itself can assume . ( 1967 : pp . 13-14 ) I do not know whether Poirier realised it , but these words read ...
Contents
Preface 74 | 7 |
Character and Liberalism | 35 |
The Ideology of Being English | 56 |
Copyright | |
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absurdist fiction achievement admired aesthetic Afternoon Men American fiction Amis Amis's Anti-Death League attitudes Barth Bayley's become Brideshead Brideshead Revisited British Burgess C. P. Snow called certainly chapter character comic consciousness contemporary critical Crouchback cultural deal described discussion early Eliot England English ideology English novel English novelists essay experience fact feel genre Giles Goat-Boy Golden Notebook hero Human Condition ideas identity imagination inevitably instance interest Iris Murdoch John Barth John Bayley Joyce kind liberal literary literature looking Lucky Jim Marxist matter modern Music myth narrative narrator Nevertheless nineteenth-century perhaps personality possible Powell Powell's Proust published Pynchon R. W. B. Lewis reader realistic reality remarked Robbe-Grillet seems sense short story shows Snow Snow's social society Strangers and Brothers stylistic Swim-Two-Birds Sword of Honour things tion totalitarian traditional twentieth century verbal Waugh Widmerpool Wilson words writing young