Tradition and Dream: The English and American Novel from the Twenties to Our Time |
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Page 2
... Virginia Woolf meant when she said : ' On or about December 1910 human nature changed . ' December 1910 was the date of the opening in London of the Post- Impressionist Exhibition , organized by Virginia Woolf's friends Roger Fry and ...
... Virginia Woolf meant when she said : ' On or about December 1910 human nature changed . ' December 1910 was the date of the opening in London of the Post- Impressionist Exhibition , organized by Virginia Woolf's friends Roger Fry and ...
Page 18
... Virginia Woolf's . It is a very small area of London , compared with Dickens's or even Henry James's , but it is solidly there . Again , as in Ulysses , individual charac- ters are brought into relationship with others by shared ...
... Virginia Woolf's . It is a very small area of London , compared with Dickens's or even Henry James's , but it is solidly there . Again , as in Ulysses , individual charac- ters are brought into relationship with others by shared ...
Page 123
... Virginia , he had been taken as a boy to Virginia proper and , sent by his father on an errand to the mansion of the plantation on which they were working , had been turned away from the door by the Negro butler . This is the traumatic ...
... Virginia , he had been taken as a boy to Virginia proper and , sent by his father on an errand to the mansion of the plantation on which they were working , had been turned away from the door by the Negro butler . This is the traumatic ...
Contents
British I | 11 |
American | 65 |
The Southern Novel Between the Wars | 108 |
Copyright | |
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action Afternoon Men American fiction American novel appeared attitude become behaviour called centre comedy comic 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 interest 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