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Book Cover
Book
Author Birns, Nicholas.

Title Understanding Anthony Powell / Nicholas Birns
Published Columbia : University of South Carolina, [2004]
©2004

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  820.912 P8822 Z/Biu  AVAILABLE
Description xvii, 389 pages ; 19 cm
regular print
Series Understanding contemporary British literature
Understanding contemporary British literature.
Contents Machine derived contents note: @MT:Contents -- @TEXT:Editor's Preface -- Preface -- Chronology -- 1. Understanding Anthony Powell -- 2. A Company of Giddy-Heads: Understanding Powell's Fiction of the 1930s -- 3. Widmerpool and Theocritus: Understanding A Dance to the Music of Time -- 4. Man's Permitted Limits: Understanding Powell's Fiction of the 1980s -- 5. The Other Side of the Dance: Understanding Powell's Memoirs -- 6. Such Ideas As One Has: Understanding Powell's Journals -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary "Suggesting that the literary world is just beginning to realize the extent of Anthony Powell's achievements, Nicholas Birns provides a fresh examination of the British writer's career and growing reputation in this introduction to his work. Birns takes a global view of Powell's corpus, situating his works in context and explaining his place among Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, and Henry Green, in the second generation of British modernists. Birns adds to the understanding of how Powell and his compatriots pioneered a "next wave" modernism in which experimentation and traditional narrative combined in a sustainable mode."
"Birns offers readings of Powell's entire oeuvre, including the novels Afternoon Men, Venusberg, and The Fisher King, and his journals, which appeared in print between 1995 and 1997. Looking especially closely at A Dance to the Music of Time, the twelve-volume sequence of novels that is Powell's masterpiece, Birns sets the series in its social and historical context, emphasizing the role that both world wars and the cold war played in Powell's life and writing. He makes a particular study of the novel's dominating force - the arrogant, opportunistic Widmerpool, a social climber who delights in his own good fortune and gloats over the sufferings of others. While noting Widmerpool's central position, Birns illumines Powell's subtle aesthetic resistance, epitomized by minor characters and the voice of the narrator, against Widmerpool and his ilk
Birns shows that instead of setting forth a single champion against evil, Powell subtly communicates a half-melancholy, half-humorous sensibility in which he invites the reader to share."--BOOK JACKET
Notes Formerly CIP. Uk
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [355]-378) and index
Subject Powell, Anthony, 1905-2000 -- Criticism and interpretation.
Autobiographical fiction, English -- History and criticism.
SUBJECT England -- In literature. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2008103109
LC no. 2004004430
ISBN 1570035490 alkaline paper
Other Titles Anthony Powell