1st Edition

Ian McEwan Subversive Readings, Informed Misreadings

By Irena Księżopolska Copyright 2024

    This book offers a discussion of seven “canonical” novels by Ian McEwan (The Cement Garden, The Comfort of Strangers, The Child in Time, The Innocent, Black Dogs, Atonement, On Chesil Beach), introducing radical new readings, which are offered not as ultimate and conclusive “solutions” of the textual puzzles, but as possibilities to engage with the text creatively, to enrich the critical consensus and restore interpretative freedom to the readers.

    This project formulates a strategy of “inclusive reading” – an approach to the text that does not seek to reduce it to a single interpretation, and yet is comprehensively informed through the analysis of the primary text, critical discussion, authorial comments and the context of the composition. Each reading demonstrates the metafictional structure of the texts, indicating that McEwan’s works may be treated as invitations to roam within their worlds, examining the multiple frames of their structure and the meanings generated thereby. All the chapters attend to submerged, repressed, or deliberately masked voices. The Cement Garden is seen as a multi-layered dream, with a shifting hierarchy of dreamers; The Comfort of Strangers is viewed as an inverted metafiction, with insubstantial characters corrupting more complex heroes; The Child in Time is read as Stephen’s book written for his dead daughter; The Innocent as a memory narrative of Leonard who refuses to notice Maria’s role as a spy. In Black Dogs the over-exposure of unreliability is studied as a screen for personal trauma; in the analysis of Atonement Briony’s claim to authorship is questioned and Cecilia is suggested as an alternative narrative agent.

    Finally, examining On Chesil Beach, both characters’ voices are reconstructed in search of the superior narrative power, which in the end is seen to be elusive, as the text seeks to undermine the hierarchy of voices.

    Contents

     

    Acknowledgements

     

    Introduction  

    The author      

    The text: informed misreadings

    The context

    Critical approaches

    Exemplifying the method: the early short stories      

    Exhibit 1: “Homemade” – reading silence, reading against irony

    Exhibit 2: “Solid Geometry” – a story of deconstruction

    Exhibit 3: “Butterflies” – a story of the reader’s entrapment

    Exhibit 4: “Reflections of a Kept Ape” – metafiction par excellence

     

    I. Inverting Reality in Fiction: The Cement Garden

    A dream within a dream        

    Liminal nightmares

    Voices, visions, delusions

     

    II. Inverting Metafiction: The Comfort of Strangers

    The oneiric city

    Intimate strangers, monstrous doubles

    The villains

    The victims

    The carnivorous city

    Inverted metafiction

     

    III. Inverting Time: The Child in Time

    Dystopia now

    The voice and the eye

    The time machine

    The clock and The Bell

    The forking paths: the conception scene

    Frames: the abduction scene

    The child in language

    The double: Charles Darke’s case

    Enchanted time: the other girl

     

    IV. Inverting Story: The Innocent

    The unwritten novel: first ideas

    Narration: the phantom frame

    Levels of clearance

    The city of spies

    Innocence

     

    V. Inverting History: Black Dogs

    The words of a dead (wo)man are modified in the guts of the living

    The shadow line

    “I cannot quite remember”

    Postmemory and post-witnesses

     

    VI. Inverting the Authors: Atonement

    Postmodernism with a moral

    Drafts and versions

    The puzzle of the letters, the puzzle of the dates

    The hidden “author”

     

    VII. (Mis)Reading against Misreadings: On Chesil Beach

    Nostalgic memory

    Metamorphoses: music, writing and shared memory – “Theft”

    Arrested development

    The (m)Elodie of memory

     

    Concluding Thoughts

    Enduring Love: writing letters to oneself

    Amsterdam: “he alone would make the speech”

    Saturday: metafiction as (un)seeing through another’s eyes

    Solar: unwriting the hero

    Sweet Tooth: metafiction as a spy game

    The Children Act: unnatural narration

    Nutshell: unnatural narrator in a metafictional Hamlet

    Machines like Me: sleeping with the enemy

    Lessons: auto-bi(bli)ography

     

    References

     

    Index

     

     

     

    Biography

    Irena Księżopolska is Assistant Professor at the University of Warsaw.