Description

Book Synopsis
First book-length critical work devoted to the impact of the end of empire and traces of imperial memory in mainstream English Literature since the Second World War. Authors studied include Josephine Tey, William Golding, Penelope Lively, David Peace and Ian McEwan. Represents the best of current scholarship.

Trade Review
An exemplary synthesis of literary-historical rigour and stylistic attentiveness., David James, Review of English Studies|End of Empire unveils the ambivalent nature of post-imperial national identity, shedding a new light not on the empire as such but on its end, decline, and fall., Maria Ridda, University of Kent, College Literature, 3 October 2013 -- .

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Contributors
Introduction: end of empire and the English novel (Bill Schwarz)
1. The road to Airstrip One: Anglo-American attitudes in the English fiction of mid-century (Patrick Parrinder)
2. Josephine Tey and her descendants: conservative modernity and the female crime novel (Cora Kaplan)
3. Colonial fiction for liberal readers: John Masters and the Savage family saga’ (Richard Steadman-Jones)
4. The entropy of Englishness: reading empire’s absence in the novels of William Golding (Rachael Gilmour)
5. The empire of romance: love in a postcolonial climate (Deborah Philips)
6. Passage from Kinjanja to Pimlico: William Boyd’s comedy of imperial decline (Michael L. Ross)
7. Unlearning empire: Penelope Lively’s Moon Tiger (Huw Marsh)
8. I am not the British Isles on two legs’: travel fiction and travelling fiction from D.H. Lawrence to Tim Parks (Suzanne Hobson)
9. Queer histories and postcolonial intimacies in Alan Hollinghurst’s The Line of Beauty (Sarah Brophy)
10. The return of the native: Pat Barker, David Peace and the regional novel after empire (James Procter)
11. Saturday’s enlightenment (David Alderson)
Afterword (Elleke Boehmer)

End of empire and the English novel since 1945

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    A Paperback by Rachael Gilmour, Bill Schwarz

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      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 7/1/2015 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719097454, 978-0719097454
      ISBN10: 0719097452

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      First book-length critical work devoted to the impact of the end of empire and traces of imperial memory in mainstream English Literature since the Second World War. Authors studied include Josephine Tey, William Golding, Penelope Lively, David Peace and Ian McEwan. Represents the best of current scholarship.

      Trade Review
      An exemplary synthesis of literary-historical rigour and stylistic attentiveness., David James, Review of English Studies|End of Empire unveils the ambivalent nature of post-imperial national identity, shedding a new light not on the empire as such but on its end, decline, and fall., Maria Ridda, University of Kent, College Literature, 3 October 2013 -- .

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements
      Contributors
      Introduction: end of empire and the English novel (Bill Schwarz)
      1. The road to Airstrip One: Anglo-American attitudes in the English fiction of mid-century (Patrick Parrinder)
      2. Josephine Tey and her descendants: conservative modernity and the female crime novel (Cora Kaplan)
      3. Colonial fiction for liberal readers: John Masters and the Savage family saga’ (Richard Steadman-Jones)
      4. The entropy of Englishness: reading empire’s absence in the novels of William Golding (Rachael Gilmour)
      5. The empire of romance: love in a postcolonial climate (Deborah Philips)
      6. Passage from Kinjanja to Pimlico: William Boyd’s comedy of imperial decline (Michael L. Ross)
      7. Unlearning empire: Penelope Lively’s Moon Tiger (Huw Marsh)
      8. I am not the British Isles on two legs’: travel fiction and travelling fiction from D.H. Lawrence to Tim Parks (Suzanne Hobson)
      9. Queer histories and postcolonial intimacies in Alan Hollinghurst’s The Line of Beauty (Sarah Brophy)
      10. The return of the native: Pat Barker, David Peace and the regional novel after empire (James Procter)
      11. Saturday’s enlightenment (David Alderson)
      Afterword (Elleke Boehmer)

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