Developing Countries in British FictionDotyczy twórczości następujących pisarzy: Joseph Conrad (Teodor Józef Konrad Korzeniowski); Joyce Cary, Edward Morgan Forster, Rudyard Kipling, D. H. Lawrence. |
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Page 93
... fiction and his last Malayan novels should be related partly to their period of composition ; in the case of the former , to his artistic immaturity and , in the case of the latter , to the unsteadiness of an artist past his prime . The ...
... fiction and his last Malayan novels should be related partly to their period of composition ; in the case of the former , to his artistic immaturity and , in the case of the latter , to the unsteadiness of an artist past his prime . The ...
Page 233
... fiction , Cary makes an important contribution to the development of the English novel in the mid - twentieth century . Cary's African fiction reveals certain lines of development . He tends to make his chief characters increasingly ...
... fiction , Cary makes an important contribution to the development of the English novel in the mid - twentieth century . Cary's African fiction reveals certain lines of development . He tends to make his chief characters increasingly ...
Page 234
... fiction has ' vitality ' , and it is not an ' indeterminate flavour ' that his fictional world has . The novels really ' owe much of their flavour ' to their location in a country portrayed with specificity and sureness . Africa is ' a ...
... fiction has ' vitality ' , and it is not an ' indeterminate flavour ' that his fictional world has . The novels really ' owe much of their flavour ' to their location in a country portrayed with specificity and sureness . Africa is ' a ...
Contents
Antecedents | 13 |
Challenges and problems of the Far East | 33 |
Conrads Malayan novels | 52 |
Copyright | |
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able action African Aissa alien Almayer appears aspects attitudes aware become beginning British Cary Cary's central characteristic characters Christian civilisation close colonial coloured comes complex concerned Congo Conrad consider course critical culture dark death developing countries East Empire English European experience face fact feelings fiction Fielding Forster give hand Heart human imperialism important India interests Italy Johnson Joseph Conrad kind Kipling Lawrence Lawrence's less letter live London looked Lord major Malayan Marlow matter means mind moral native nature negro never Nigeria novel partly Passage period political position presentation primitive problems qualities race racial realistic realities relations relationship representative role rule Saved scene seems sense shows side social society story suggests tale things thought true turn values Western whole woman writers