1st Edition

The English Novel in the Twentieth Century The Doom of Empire

By Martin Green Copyright 1984
258 Pages
by Routledge

258 Pages
by Routledge

First published in 1984, The English Novel in the Twentieth Century discusses six authors whom Dr Green saw as the most interesting fiction writers of twentieth century Britain: Kipling, Lawrence, Joyce, Waugh, Amis, and Lessing. The author asks how these novelists responded to and expressed in their work the pressure exerted upon all English people by their possession and subsequent loss of... Read more

Preface Imperial England 1. The empire and the adventure story 2. Rudyard Kipling: the empire strikes back 3. D.H. Lawrence: the triumph of the sisters 4. The empire of art Ex-Imperial England 5. Evelyn Waugh: the triumph of laughter 6. Kingsley Amis: the protest against protest 7. Doris Lessing: the return from the empire 8. The fall of Kipling’s shadow

Biography

Martin Green (1927–2010) was a distinguished English professor at Tufts University (1963–65, 1968–94). He earned his B.A. from St. John’s College, Cambridge, studying under renowned critic F.R. Leavis, followed by an M.A. from King’s College, London (1951). After serving in the Royal Air Force and teaching in Turkey and France, he completed his Ph.D. at the University of Michigan (1957). A prolific scholar, Green authored 37 books spanning diverse topics from Tolstoy and Gandhi to Robinson Crusoe adventure narratives.