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"Understanding Anita Brookner examines the undeniably bleak view of the world in Brookner's fiction and the solitary protagonists whose "faith in a better world" is both their tragedy and their beauty. Cheryl Alexander Malcolm acquaints the reader with Brookner's distinguished career (first as an eminent art critic and historian, then as a writer), critical acclaim and awards, London birth and lifelong residence, and Polish Jewish family background. She examines the limited range of literary forms with which Brookner, abjuring the postmodern devices of jumbled chronologies and multiple narrators, contents herself. She illustrates Brookner's recurrent point of view, characterized by traditional British cultural values - understatement, deference to authority, and acceptance of a class system."--Jacket.
Women and literature --- English Literature --- English --- Languages & Literatures --- History --- Brookner, Anita --- Criticism and interpretation.
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Fiction --- Thematology --- Literature --- Canon --- Writers --- Book --- Brookner, Anita --- Murdoch, Iris --- Tennant, Emma --- Rendell, Ruth --- Great Britain
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"Anita Brookner was known for writing boring books about lonely, single women. Misreading Anita Brookner unlocks the mysteries of the famously depressed Brookner heroine by creating entirely new ways to read six Brookner novels. Drawing on Brookner's legacy as a renowned historian of French Romantic art and on diverse intertextual sources from Charles Baudelaire to Henry James, Renee Vivien and Freud, this book argues that Brookner's solitary twentieth-century women can also be seen as variations of queer nineteenth-century male artist archetypes. Conjuring a cast of Romantic personae including the flaneur, the dandy, the aesthete, the military man, the queer, the analysand, the degenerate and the storyteller, it illuminates clusters of nineteenth-century behaviours which help decode the lives of Brookner's twentieth-century women. This exploration of Brookner's performative Romanticism' exposes new depths within her outsider introverts, who are revealed as a subversive blend of the historical, the contemporary, the masculine and the feminine."--
Aestheticism (Literature) --- Brookner, Anita --- Criticism and interpretation. --- queer nineteenth century --- Romantic personae --- women's writing --- Anita Brookner
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Women and literature --- Phenomenology and literature. --- Phenomenology in literature. --- History --- Brookner, Anita --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Phenomenology and literature --- Phenomenology in literature --- -Literature --- Literature --- -Philosophy --- -Criticism and interpretation --- Theses --- -History --- -Brookner, Anita --- Philosophy --- Women and literature - England - History - 20th century. --- Brookner, Anita - Criticism and interpretation.
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LITERARY CRITICISM --- European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh --- English fiction --- Women and literature --- Space and time in literature --- Personal space in literature --- Art, British --- Women in literature --- Bildungsromans, English --- English Literature --- English --- Languages & Literatures --- History and criticism --- History --- Space and time in literature. --- Personal space in literature. --- Women in literature. --- Bildungsromans --- History and criticism. --- Gaskell, Elizabeth Cleghorn, --- Brontë, Charlotte, --- Eliot, George, --- Brookner, Anita. --- Bildungsroman --- Woman (Christian theology) in literature --- Women in drama --- Women in poetry --- Space and time as a theme in literature --- Greenwood, Frederick, --- Bronte, Charlotte,
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In this study, John Kekes develops the view that good lives depend on maintaining a balance between one's moral tradition and individuality. Our moral tradition provides the forms of good lives and the permissible ways of trying to achieve them. But to do so, the author argues, we must grow in self-knowledge and self-control to make our characters suitable for realizing our aspirations. In addressing general readers as well as scholars, Kekes makes these philosophical views concrete by drawing on a rich variety of literary sources, including, among others, the works of Sophocles, Henry James, Tolstoy, and Edith Wharton. The first half of the work concentrates on social morality, establishing the conditions all good lives must meet. The second discusses personal morality, the sphere of individuality. Its development enables us to discover what is important to us and how we can fit our personal aspirations into the forms of life our moral tradition provides. Kekes's argument derives its inspiration from Aristotle's objectivism, Hume's emphasis on custom and feeling, and Mill's concentration on individuals and their experiments in living. This book is a nontechnical yet closely reasoned attempt to provide a contemporary answer to the age-old question of how to live well.
Ethics --- Individuality --- Satisfaction --- Tradition (Philosophy) --- Traditionalism (Philosophy) --- Philosophy --- Self --- Self-realization --- Psychology --- Conformity --- Identity (Psychology) --- Likes and dislikes --- Personality --- Deontology --- Ethics, Primitive --- Ethology --- Moral philosophy --- Morality --- Morals --- Philosophy, Moral --- Science, Moral --- Values --- Ethik --- Annas, Julia. --- Aristotle. --- Berlin, Isaiah. --- Brookner, Anita. --- Callisthenes. --- Fingarette, Herbert. --- Foot, Philippa. --- James, Henry. --- Kantianism. --- Knox, Bernard. --- appeal. --- autonomy. --- benevolence. --- breadth. --- civic friendship. --- coherence. --- complex moral situations. --- conservatism. --- conventions. --- defeasible commitments. --- double-mindedness. --- enforcement of social morality. --- external goods. --- good and evil. --- good judgment. --- happiness. --- human limitations. --- human welfare. --- incommensurability. --- integrity. --- interpretation. --- latitude. --- liberalism. --- loose commitments. --- modern sensibility. --- moral horror. --- naturalism. --- objectivism. --- objectivity. --- perfection. --- personal satisfaction. --- pluralism. --- principles. --- realism. --- reflective purity. --- self-condemnation. --- simple moral situations. --- sympathy. --- tests of good lives. --- utilitarianism. --- virtues. --- voluntarism. --- Ethische Theorie --- Moral --- Philosophische Ethik --- Sittenlehre --- Moralphilosophie --- Ethiker --- Praktische Philosophie --- Theorie
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