Description

Book Synopsis
The book provides a lucid analysis of all Ian McEwan fiction published to date, from his 1975 debut short stories up to the 2016 novel Nutshell, spanning forty years of his literary career. Apart from a general discussion of McEwan's works, the study offers a uniform focal point: it concentrates on one of the key issues taken up by the writer the aspect of relationships between partners and between family members. As the book demonstrates, the novelist employs interpersonal relations to establish a pertinent context in which he can dramatically portray the process of identity formation in his characters. Throughout his fiction, McEwan consistently uses references to psychoanalysis, either veiled or direct. The proposed book investigates the novelist's oeuvre through the lens of the psychoanalytic theory developed by Jacques Lacan. The approach used makes the book useful both for readers well familiar with this apparatus, and for those who need introduction to Lacanian psychoanalysis a

Trade Review
An excellent blend of critical explication and close analysis; Dobrogoszcz deftly and originally combines thought-provoking elucidation of the novels with a consistent theoretical perspective throughout. -- Peter Childs, Newman University, Birmingham
Dobrogoszcz’s study of McEwan’s fiction is marked by an exemplary scope and focus on detail. It offers exciting and up-to-date readings of individual texts and of the oeuvre as a whole. This study is a stimulating guide to the complexities of character relationships in McEwan’s work. Dobrogoszcz’s Lacanian approach is presented with such lucidity and relevance that readers who read texts from other perspectives will be convinced and enlightened. -- David Malcolm, University of Gdansk
Dobrogoszcz’s up-to-date book about family and amorous relationships in Ian McEwan’s work is a fine addition to McEwan studies. Building on existing McEwan criticism, his explorations are comprehensive, rigorous, and provide powerfully insightful interpretations of the role of emotions and (post-)Freudian psychology in the work of one of today’s finest living writers. Dobrogoszcz reads McEwan from the early short stories through Nutshell, showing that parental inadequacy, selfishness and other behavioral shortcomings are a recipe for disaster, often tragic, always human. -- Sebastian Groes, University of Wolverhampton

Table of Contents
Introduction Part 1: Beginnings Chapter 1: Disturbing Proximity and Grotesque Proportions When It Comes to First Love, Last Rites and In Between the Sheets Chapter 2: The Oedipal Siblings in The Cement Garden of Eden Chapter 3: Anchoring The Comfort Of Strangers in the Sadistic Paternal Superego Part 2: Developments Chapter 4: The Child in Time and the Child Within Chapter 5: The Precariousness of The Innocent Childish Masculinity Chapter 6: The Traumatic Encounter with Black Dogs and the Real Chapter 7: Enduring Love, Childlessness, Unreliability, and the Enigma of the Other’s Desire Part 3: Maturity Chapter 8: The Path Toward Death via Amsterdam Chapter 9: The Recognition of Otherness in the Fantasy of Atonement Chapter 10: The Pacifying Saturday Fantasy of a Non-pacifist Chapter 11: The Big Other Is Watching You Even On Chesil Beach Part 4: Recent Fiction Chapter 12: Solar and the Unbearable Heaviness of Desire Chapter 13: The Opalescent Sweet Tooth of Deceptive Manipulation Chapter 14: How The Children Act to Effect the Split Between Psychological and Symbolic Identity Chapter 15: Craving the Mother’s Desire in a Nutshell Conclusion: Love Will Tear Us Apart?

Family and Relationships in Ian McEwans Fiction

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    A Hardback by Tomasz Dobrogoszcz

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/23/2018 12:02:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498539876, 978-1498539876
      ISBN10: 1498539874

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The book provides a lucid analysis of all Ian McEwan fiction published to date, from his 1975 debut short stories up to the 2016 novel Nutshell, spanning forty years of his literary career. Apart from a general discussion of McEwan's works, the study offers a uniform focal point: it concentrates on one of the key issues taken up by the writer the aspect of relationships between partners and between family members. As the book demonstrates, the novelist employs interpersonal relations to establish a pertinent context in which he can dramatically portray the process of identity formation in his characters. Throughout his fiction, McEwan consistently uses references to psychoanalysis, either veiled or direct. The proposed book investigates the novelist's oeuvre through the lens of the psychoanalytic theory developed by Jacques Lacan. The approach used makes the book useful both for readers well familiar with this apparatus, and for those who need introduction to Lacanian psychoanalysis a

      Trade Review
      An excellent blend of critical explication and close analysis; Dobrogoszcz deftly and originally combines thought-provoking elucidation of the novels with a consistent theoretical perspective throughout. -- Peter Childs, Newman University, Birmingham
      Dobrogoszcz’s study of McEwan’s fiction is marked by an exemplary scope and focus on detail. It offers exciting and up-to-date readings of individual texts and of the oeuvre as a whole. This study is a stimulating guide to the complexities of character relationships in McEwan’s work. Dobrogoszcz’s Lacanian approach is presented with such lucidity and relevance that readers who read texts from other perspectives will be convinced and enlightened. -- David Malcolm, University of Gdansk
      Dobrogoszcz’s up-to-date book about family and amorous relationships in Ian McEwan’s work is a fine addition to McEwan studies. Building on existing McEwan criticism, his explorations are comprehensive, rigorous, and provide powerfully insightful interpretations of the role of emotions and (post-)Freudian psychology in the work of one of today’s finest living writers. Dobrogoszcz reads McEwan from the early short stories through Nutshell, showing that parental inadequacy, selfishness and other behavioral shortcomings are a recipe for disaster, often tragic, always human. -- Sebastian Groes, University of Wolverhampton

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Part 1: Beginnings Chapter 1: Disturbing Proximity and Grotesque Proportions When It Comes to First Love, Last Rites and In Between the Sheets Chapter 2: The Oedipal Siblings in The Cement Garden of Eden Chapter 3: Anchoring The Comfort Of Strangers in the Sadistic Paternal Superego Part 2: Developments Chapter 4: The Child in Time and the Child Within Chapter 5: The Precariousness of The Innocent Childish Masculinity Chapter 6: The Traumatic Encounter with Black Dogs and the Real Chapter 7: Enduring Love, Childlessness, Unreliability, and the Enigma of the Other’s Desire Part 3: Maturity Chapter 8: The Path Toward Death via Amsterdam Chapter 9: The Recognition of Otherness in the Fantasy of Atonement Chapter 10: The Pacifying Saturday Fantasy of a Non-pacifist Chapter 11: The Big Other Is Watching You Even On Chesil Beach Part 4: Recent Fiction Chapter 12: Solar and the Unbearable Heaviness of Desire Chapter 13: The Opalescent Sweet Tooth of Deceptive Manipulation Chapter 14: How The Children Act to Effect the Split Between Psychological and Symbolic Identity Chapter 15: Craving the Mother’s Desire in a Nutshell Conclusion: Love Will Tear Us Apart?

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