A Study in Greene:Graham Greene and the Art of the Novel: Graham Greene and the Art of the Novel

前表紙
OUP Oxford, 2006/09/07 - 208 ページ
Bernard Bergonzi has been reading Graham Greene for many years; he still possesses the original edition of The End of the Affair that he bought when it was published in 1951. After so much recent attention to Greene's life he believes it is time to return to his writings; in this critical study Bergonzi makes a close examination of the language and structure of Greene's novels, and traces the obsessive motifs that recur throughout his long career. Most earlier criticism waswritten while Greene was still alive and working, and was to some extent provisional, as the final shape of his work was not yet apparent. In this book Bergonzi is able to take a view of Greene's whole career as a novelist, which extended from 1929 to 1988. He believes that Greene's earlier work was hisbest, combining melodrama, realism, and poetry, with Brighton Rock, published in 1938, a moral fable that draws on crime fiction and Jacobean tragedy, as the masterpiece. The novels that Greene published after the 1950s were very professional examples of skilful story-telling but represented a decline from this high level of achievement. Bergonzi challenges assumptions about the nature of Greene's debt to cinema, and attempts to clarify the complexities and contradictions of hisreligious ideas. Although this book engages with questions that arise in academic discussions of Greene, it is written with general readers in mind.

他の版 - すべて表示

著者について (2006)

Bernard Bergonzi read English as a mature student at Wadham College, Oxford, having previously worked in clerical jobs. He has been assistant lecturer, then lecturer, at the University of Manchester, and senior lecturer and then Professor of English at the University of Warwick. He has been Emeritus Professor of English there since 1992, and has held visiting professorships at Brandeis, Stanford, and Louisville. Since 1961 he has published many books of criticism and biography, and edited several more. His most recent titles include iExploding English: Criticism, Theory, Culture/i (OUP, 1990), iWartime and Aftermath: English Literature and its Background 1939-1960/i (OUP, 1993), iWar Poets and Other Subjects/i (Ashgate, 2000), and iA Victorian Wanderer: The Life of Thomas Arnold the Younger/i (OUP, 2003), of which A. N. Wilson wrote in the iSpectator/i, 'Professor Bergonzi has painted a perfect Victorian miniature'.

書誌情報