Description

Book Synopsis
Eric Ambler's first six novels released between 1936 and 1940 quickly established his reputation as a master craftsman of intrigue and espionage narratives. Far less often discussed are the twelve Cold War novels he published, after an eleven-year hiatus as a screenwriter, between 1951 and 1981. This study argues that his entire corpus manifests late modernism's impulse toward a broadly social, political, and cultural critique of the times. Ambler's fiction from the mid-1950s onward is also remarkable for its ludic turn as he assesses the self-deceptions of an increasingly bureaucratized and media-focused world blind to its own follies. In these later works can be seen elements of what has come to be known as postmodernism, though in his commitment to chronicling the juggernaut of modernity he remains a uniquely independent witness of what is now being called the long twentieth century.

Table of Contents
Introduction 1On the Eve of Cataclysm 2Fascismo, Espionage, and War’s Contagion 3Postwar Theatres of Deception 4Ambler’s Ludic Turn 5International Connivance and Disinformation 6Final Soundings Conclusion

Eric Ambler’s Novels: Critiquing Modernity

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    A Hardback by Robert Lance Snyder

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      View other formats and editions of Eric Ambler’s Novels: Critiquing Modernity by Robert Lance Snyder

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 30/12/2019
      ISBN13: 9781793614186, 978-1793614186
      ISBN10: 1793614180

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Eric Ambler's first six novels released between 1936 and 1940 quickly established his reputation as a master craftsman of intrigue and espionage narratives. Far less often discussed are the twelve Cold War novels he published, after an eleven-year hiatus as a screenwriter, between 1951 and 1981. This study argues that his entire corpus manifests late modernism's impulse toward a broadly social, political, and cultural critique of the times. Ambler's fiction from the mid-1950s onward is also remarkable for its ludic turn as he assesses the self-deceptions of an increasingly bureaucratized and media-focused world blind to its own follies. In these later works can be seen elements of what has come to be known as postmodernism, though in his commitment to chronicling the juggernaut of modernity he remains a uniquely independent witness of what is now being called the long twentieth century.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction 1On the Eve of Cataclysm 2Fascismo, Espionage, and War’s Contagion 3Postwar Theatres of Deception 4Ambler’s Ludic Turn 5International Connivance and Disinformation 6Final Soundings Conclusion

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