Loving, Living, Party Going

Loving, Living, Party Going
Author :
Publisher : Random House
Total Pages : 530
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781409020929
ISBN-13 : 1409020924
Rating : 4/5 (29 Downloads)

Synopsis Loving, Living, Party Going by : Henry Green

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY SEBASTIAN FAULKS Henry Green, whom W. H. Auden called 'the finest living English novelist', is the most neglected writer of the last century and the one most deserving of rediscovery by a new generation. This volume brings together three of Henry Green's intensely original novels. Loving explored class distinctions through the medium of love and brilliantly contrasts the lives of servants and masters in an Irish castle during World War Two, Living of workers and owners in a Birmingham iron foundry. Party Going is a brilliant comedy of manners, presenting a party of wealthy travellers stranded by fog in a London railway hotel while throngs of workers await trains in the station below.

Loving ; Living ; Party Going

Loving ; Living ; Party Going
Author :
Publisher : Penguin
Total Pages : 532
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0140186913
ISBN-13 : 9780140186918
Rating : 4/5 (13 Downloads)

Synopsis Loving ; Living ; Party Going by : Henry Green

Class distinction is the common theme: between masters and servants in an Irish castle, owners and workers in a foundry, and the wealthy and working class in a railway station

Henry Green

Henry Green
Author :
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Total Pages : 208
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780191053870
ISBN-13 : 0191053872
Rating : 4/5 (70 Downloads)

Synopsis Henry Green by : Nick Shepley

Henry Green: Class, Style, and the Everyday offers a critical prism through which Green's fiction—from his earliest published short stories, as an Eton schoolboy, through to his last dialogic novels of the 1950s—can be seen as a coherent, subtle, and humorous critique of the tension between class, style, and realism in the first half of the twentieth century. The study extends on-going critical recognition that Green's work is central to the development of the novel from the twenties to the fifties, acting as a vital bridge between late modernist, inter-war, post-war, and postmodernist fiction. The overarching contention is that the shifting and destabilizing nature of Green's oeuvre sets up a predicament similar to that confronted by theorists of the everyday. Consequently, each chapter acknowledges the indeterminacy of the writing, whether it be: the non-singular functioning (or malfunctioning) of the name; the open-ended, purposefully ambiguous nature of its symbols; the shifting, cinematic nature of Green's prose style; the sensitive, but resolutely unsentimental depictions of the working-classes and the aristocracy in the inter-war period; the impact of war and its inconsistent irruptions into daily life; or the ways in which moments or events are rapidly subsumed back into the flux of the everyday, their impact left uncertain. Critics have, historically, offered up singular readings of Green's work, or focused on the poetic or recreative qualities of certain works, particularly those of the 1940s. Green's writing is, undoubtedly, poetic and extraordinary, but this book also pays attention to the clichéd, meta-textual, and uneventful aspects of his fiction.

Handbook of the English Novel of the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries

Handbook of the English Novel of the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries
Author :
Publisher : Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages : 667
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9783110393361
ISBN-13 : 3110393360
Rating : 4/5 (61 Downloads)

Synopsis Handbook of the English Novel of the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries by : Christoph Reinfandt

The Handbook systematically charts the trajectory of the English novel from its emergence as the foremost literary genre in the early twentieth century to its early twenty-first century status of eccentric eminence in new media environments. Systematic chapters address ̒The English Novel as a Distinctly Modern Genreʼ, ̒The Novel in the Economy’, ̒Genres’, ̒Gender’ (performativity, masculinities, feminism, queer), and ̒The Burden of Representationʼ (class and ethnicity). Extended contextualized close readings of more than twenty key texts from Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (1899) to Tom McCarthy’s Satin Island (2015) supplement the systematic approach and encourage future research by providing overviews of reception and theoretical perspectives.

British Fiction in the 1930s

British Fiction in the 1930s
Author :
Publisher : Springer
Total Pages : 233
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781349221714
ISBN-13 : 1349221716
Rating : 4/5 (14 Downloads)

Synopsis British Fiction in the 1930s by : James Gindin

British Fiction in the 1930s studies the literary climate of the British 1930s through a critical treatment of some of its influential and socially representative fiction. The works depict, in various ways, a culture under the stress of seemingly insoluble economic and intensifying international dilemmas, a culture that seems betrayed by the promise of its past and the paralysis of its present. The fiction considers transforming solutions, individual and sexual rebellions as well as the fears and attractions of social and political change.

Literature in the First Media Age

Literature in the First Media Age
Author :
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Total Pages : 333
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780674728264
ISBN-13 : 0674728262
Rating : 4/5 (64 Downloads)

Synopsis Literature in the First Media Age by : David Trotter

The period between the World Wars was one of the richest and most inventive in the long history of British literature. Interwar literature, David Trotter argues, stood apart by virtue of the sheer intelligence of the enquiries it undertook into the technological mediation of experience. After around 1925, literary works began to portray communication by telephone, television, radio, and sound cinema—and to examine the sorts of behavior made possible for the first time by virtual interaction. And they filled up, too, with the look, sound, smell, taste, and feel of the new synthetic and semi-synthetic materials that were reshaping everyday modern life. New media and new materials gave writers a fresh opportunity to reimagine both how lives might be lived and how literature might be written. Today, Trotter observes, such material and immaterial mediations have become even more decisive. Communications technology is an attitude before it is a machine or a set of codes. It is an idea about the prosthetic enhancement of our capacity to communicate. The writers who first woke up to this fact were not postwar, postmodern, or post-anything else: some of the best of them lived and wrote in the British Isles in the period between the World Wars. In defining what they achieved, this book creates a new literary canon of works distinguished formally and thematically by their alertness to the implications of new media and new materials.

Translating Style

Translating Style
Author :
Publisher : Burns & Oates
Total Pages : 264
Release :
ISBN-10 : UOM:39015039922870
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (70 Downloads)

Synopsis Translating Style by : Tim Parks

The aim of the book is to savour the extent to which any text is driven by the language in which it is written, even when it departs from standard usage, when it seeks to achieve the status of literature.

The Cambridge Companion to the Twentieth-Century English Novel

The Cambridge Companion to the Twentieth-Century English Novel
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 299
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780521884167
ISBN-13 : 0521884160
Rating : 4/5 (67 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cambridge Companion to the Twentieth-Century English Novel by : Robert L. Caserio

A survey of the development of the novel since 1900, with detailed information about individual novels, themes and subgenres.

Hugging the Shore

Hugging the Shore
Author :
Publisher : Random House Trade Paperbacks
Total Pages : 897
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780812983784
ISBN-13 : 0812983785
Rating : 4/5 (84 Downloads)

Synopsis Hugging the Shore by : John Updike

WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD “Writing criticism is to writing fiction and poetry as hugging the shore is to sailing in the open sea,” writes John Updike in his Foreword to this collection of literary considerations. But the sailor doth protest too much: This collection begins somewhere near deep water, with a flotilla of short fiction, humor pieces, and personal essays, and even the least of the reviews here—those that “come about and draw even closer to the land with another nine-point quotation”—are distinguished by a novelist’s style, insight, and accuracy, not just surface sparkle. Indeed, as James Atlas commented, the most substantial critical articles, on Melville, Hawthorne, and Whitman, go out as far as Updike’s fiction: They are “the sort of ambitious scholarly reappraisal not seen in this country since the death of Edmund Wilson.” With Hugging the Shore, Michiko Kakutani wrote, Updike established himself “as a major and enduring critical voice; indeed, as the pre-eminent critic of his generation.”

Discourse and Grammar

Discourse and Grammar
Author :
Publisher : Walter de Gruyter
Total Pages : 244
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9783111637754
ISBN-13 : 3111637751
Rating : 4/5 (54 Downloads)

Synopsis Discourse and Grammar by : Peter Erdmann