Chance and the Modern British Novel
eBook - PDF

Chance and the Modern British Novel

From Henry Green to Iris Murdoch

  1. 192 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Chance and the Modern British Novel

From Henry Green to Iris Murdoch

About this book

Chance, and its representation in literature, has a long and problematic history. It is a vital aspect of the way we experience the world, and yet its function is frequently marginalised and downplayed. Offering a new reading of the development of the novel during the mid-twentieth century, Jordan argues that this simple novelistic paradox became more pressing during a period in which chance became a cultural, scientific and literary preoccupation - through scientific developments such as quantum mechanics and the uncertainty principle, the influence of existential philosophy, the growth of gambling, and the uncertainty provoked by the Second World War. In tracing the novel's representation of chance during this crucial period, we see both the development of the novel, and draw wider conclusions about the relationship between narrative and the contingent, the arbitrary and the uncertain. While the novel had historically rejected, marginalised or undermined chance, during this period it becomes a creative and welcome co-contributor to the novel's development, as writers such as Samuel Beckett, B.S. Johnson, Henry Green and Iris Murdoch show.

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Yes, you can access Chance and the Modern British Novel by Julia Jordan in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & English Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Continuum
Year
2010
Print ISBN
9781441110145
eBook ISBN
9781441109712

Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. Preface
  4. Chapter One: A Fine Thing: A History of Chance
  5. Chapter Two: ā€˜Swear to tell me everything that goes wrong’: Henry Green and Free Will in the Novel
  6. Chapter Three: ā€˜I admire the will to welcome everything – the stupid violence of chance’: Samuel Beckett and the Representation of Possibility
  7. Chapter Four: ā€˜Let’s Celebrate the Accidental’: B. S. Johnson, the Aleatory and the Radical Generation
  8. Chapter Five: ā€˜The incomprehensible operation of grace’: Mess, Contingency and the Example of Iris Murdoch
  9. Conclusion
  10. Notes
  11. Bibliography
  12. Index