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Challenge and Continuity

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Challenge and Continuity is the first full-length attempt to map an important feature of nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature: the thematic novel. It analyses it first in D.H. Lawrence, rev...
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  • 01 January 2004
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Challenge and Continuity is the first full-length attempt to map an important feature of nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature: the thematic novel. It analyses it first in D.H. Lawrence, revealing how in The Rainbow and Women in Love the psychology of the characters is brought into a wider social and ideological context that generates their controlling themes. Having defined an alternative tradition, exemplified by George Eliot and Tolstoy, focused primarily on individual development, it examines how that kind of interest was aligned in the nineteenth century with the thematic, in a loose fashion by Charlotte Brontë, Turgenev, Hardy and Wells, and more precisely by Stendhal, Flaubert and Emily Brontë. Challenge and Continuity goes on to identify the core of the thematic tradition in the work of Dickens, Hawthorne, Melville, Dostoevsky and Conrad. It is then revealed as a distinguishing feature of modernism in Ford, Forster, Joyce and Woolf, with continuations into Huxley, Orwell and Beckett. With its complex of well-researched links over a very wide area, this book should appeal to scholars and students alike, and also to the general reader with some knowledge of the field.
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Price: $149.00
Pages: 257
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Textxet: Studies in Comparative Literature
Publication Date: 01 January 2004
ISBN: 9789042016033
Format: Paperback
REVIEWS Icon
”It’s a good idea to work on the texts and not on what has been said of them, and the result is that Lawrence (and others) do emerge boldly as something like themselves.” - Frank Kermode
“I don’t think I disagree about D.H. Lawrence very much - or indeed any of the other writers they write about.” - Tony Tanner
“I like its fresh and vigorous tone, its direct style, its sharp focus. It’s a pleasure to read and it’s constructed in an original and effective way. The themes they explore deserve this kind of development, and their particular line on individual novels is always intelligent and usually convincing.” - Graham Martin