Description

In The Great Tradition, published in 1948, F. R. Leavis seemed to rate the work of Charles Dickens - with the exception of Hard Times - as lacking the seriousness and formal control of the true masters of English fiction.

By 1970, when Dickens the Novelist was published on the first centenary of the writer''s death, Leavis and his lifelong collaborator Q. D. (Queenie) Leavis, had changed their minds. ''Our purpose'', they wrote, ''is to enforce as unanswerably as possible the conviction that Dickens was one of the greatest of creative writers . . .''

In seven typically robust and uncompromising chapters, the Leavises grapple with the evaluation of a writer who was then still open to dismissal as a mere entertainer, a caricaturist not worthy of discussion in the same breath as Henry James. Q. D. Leavis shows, for example, how deeply influential David Copperfield was on the work of Tolstoy, and explores the symbolic richness of the nightmare

Dickens the Novelist

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    A Paperback by F. R. Leavis

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      Publisher: Faber & Faber
      Publication Date: 5/29/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780571243600, 978-0571243600
      ISBN10: 0571243606

      Description

      In The Great Tradition, published in 1948, F. R. Leavis seemed to rate the work of Charles Dickens - with the exception of Hard Times - as lacking the seriousness and formal control of the true masters of English fiction.

      By 1970, when Dickens the Novelist was published on the first centenary of the writer''s death, Leavis and his lifelong collaborator Q. D. (Queenie) Leavis, had changed their minds. ''Our purpose'', they wrote, ''is to enforce as unanswerably as possible the conviction that Dickens was one of the greatest of creative writers . . .''

      In seven typically robust and uncompromising chapters, the Leavises grapple with the evaluation of a writer who was then still open to dismissal as a mere entertainer, a caricaturist not worthy of discussion in the same breath as Henry James. Q. D. Leavis shows, for example, how deeply influential David Copperfield was on the work of Tolstoy, and explores the symbolic richness of the nightmare

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