Elizabeth Bowen: The Later Fiction

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Museum Tusculanum Press, 2001 - 224 páginas
This study of Elizabeth Bowen (1899-1973) examines aspects of theme and strategy in her last four novels, glancing also at the short stories she published after the Second World War. In a separate section, brief presentations and plot summaries of the works discussed are placed in the context of her life. Bowen entered the literary arena in the 1920s, at a time when the English novel was flourishing and the short story beginning to be recognized as a serious art form. Between 1927 and 1938 she published six full-length novels; it was largely the pressures of the Second World War that then caused eleven years to lapse before she brought out her much acclaimed novel of wartime London, The Heat of the Day (1949). This medley of romance, spy-story and psychological thriller anticipated the three novels that Bowen went on to write in the 1950s and 1960s, which are all concerned with problems of identity and communication; they also deal with the passing of time and the influence of the dead

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Contenido

List of illustrations
6
Identity
43
Communication
66
Word Clusters and Interlinking Images
84
Narrative Roles
100
CHAPTER
165
Appendix
211
Bibliography
220
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