Abstract
This paper examines narrative representations of authors and authorship in English-language fiction from the 1890s to the 1920s. From Henry James onwards, such narratives revise the basic, and by that time exhausted, plot elements of the novel of literary apprenticeship as featured in Dickens's David Copperfield and Thackeray's Pendennis, among many others. Instead of focusing on ideas of development and professional formation, they depict authors subdued by a sense of shrinking opportunities and lack of movement. Aging or dying authors in James and Mann, young but soon disappointed authors in Joyce, Forster, or Green: wherever we look, we find an ambivalence of promise that often ends in stagnation, failure, even death. In this context, my paper presents a close reading of three less frequently discussed modernist variations on the literary bildungsroman: Arthur Machen's The Hill of Dreams (1897/1907), E.M. Forster's The Longestfourney (1907), and Henry Green's Blindness (1926).
Item Type: | Journal article |
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Faculties: | Languages and Literatures > Department 3 |
Subjects: | 400 Language > 400 Language |
ISSN: | 0303-4178 |
Language: | English |
Item ID: | 110570 |
Date Deposited: | 02. Apr 2024, 07:18 |
Last Modified: | 02. Apr 2024, 07:18 |