New Grub Street by George Gissing

New Grub Street by George Gissing

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Résumé

Edited and with an introduction by John Goode, this is Gissing's novel of men and women forced to make their living by writing. Their daily lives and broken dreams are made and marred by the rigours of urban life, and the demands of the newborn mass communications industry.

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New Grub Street by George Gissing

Generally regarded as George Gissing's finest novel, this is the story of the daily lives and broken dreams of men and women forced to earn a living by the pen. It tells of a group of novelists, journalists and scholars caught in the literary and cultural crisis that hit Britain in the closing years of the 19th century, as universal education, popular journalism and mass communication began to leave their mark on the life of intellectuals. Projecting a strong sense of the London in which his characters struggle, Gissing also illuminates "the valley of the shadow of books", where the spirit of alienation that created modernism was already stirring. John Goode, who has edited and written the introduction to this edition, is the author of "Tradition and Tolerance in Nineteenth Century Fiction" and also edited Gissing's "The Nether World" and " George Gissing: Ideology and Fiction".
Gissing, George: - George Gissing (1857-1903) was an English novelist, noted for the unflinching realism of his novels about the lower middle class. Gissing was educated at Owens College, Manchester, where his academic career was brilliant until he was expelled (and briefly imprisoned) for theft. The life of near poverty and constant drudgery-writing and teaching-that he led until the mid-1880s is described in the novels New Grub Street (1891) and The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft (1903). Before he was 21 he conceived the ambition of writing a long series of novels, somewhat in the manner of Balzac, whom he admired. The first of these, Workers in the Dawn, appeared in 1880, to be followed by 21 others. Between 1886 and 1895 he published one or more novels every year. He also wrote Charles Dickens: A Critical Study (1898), a perceptive piece of literary criticism. His work is serious-though not without a good deal of comic observation-and scrupulously honest. On the social position and psychology of women he is particularly acute: The Odd Women (1893) is a powerful study of female frustration. Gissing was deeply critical, in an almost wholly negative way, of contemporary society.
SKU Non disponible
ISBN 13 9780192829634
ISBN 10 0192829637
Titre New Grub Street
Auteur George Gissing
État Non disponible
Type de reliure Paperback
Éditeur Oxford University Press
Année de publication 1993-10-01
Nombre de pages 567
Note de couverture La photo du livre est présentée à titre d'illustration uniquement. La reliure, la couverture ou l'édition réelle peuvent varier.
Note Non disponible