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Margaret Drabble

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Margaret Drabble Synopsis

Margaret Drabble is a writer whose subject matter and technique have developed profoundly since the early sixties: this book draws together the different aspects of her narrative practice, and looks at the increasing flexibility of her narrative methods, both in terms of the kind of narrator used and in the structuring of plot events. The often distanced and ironic narration is discussed, and shown to reinforce Drabble’s recurrent themes – themes that include the effect of early family influence and heredity on free choice, the inexorable pressure of social changes, and the role of accident in destabilizing the confident individual. In the later novels people move in a world where they and others may be victims of a callous society, but may equally be guilty of condoning or promoting society’s worst trends. This study describes how narrative increasingly becomes ambiguous, offering then withholding support for the behaviour of the characters, and challenging the reader to think again.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780746309841
Publication date: 31st December 2005
Author: Glenda Leeming
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 128 pages
Series: Writers and Their Work
Genres: Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000