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Elsa Cavalié, Laurent Mellet (Beteiligte)

Only Connect


E. M. Forsterīs Legacies in British Fiction
Herausgegeben von Cavalié, Elsa; Mellet, Laurent
Neuausg. 2017. 352 S. 225 mm
Verlag/Jahr: PETER LANG LTD. INTERNATIONAL ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS 2017
ISBN: 3-03-432599-1 (3034325991)
Neue ISBN: 978-3-03-432599-8 (9783034325998)

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This book questions the artistic, aesthetic, political and ethical legacy of E. M. Forsterīs novels. It covers Forsterīs literary, cinematic and musical legacies across the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and deal with many authors, such as Melville, Isherwood, Hollinghurst and Kureishi.
Since Forsterīs death in 1970, many British novelists and film directors have acknowledged and even claimed the influence of the novelist of the English soul (in Woolfīs terms) and of a renewed faith in both human relationships and a quintessentially British liberal-humanism. After the ethical turn at the end of the twentieth century, British literature today seems to go back even more drastically to the figure of the individual human being, and to turn the narrative space into some laboratory of a new form of empowerment of the otherīs political autonomy. It is in this context that the references to Forster are more and more frequent, both in British fiction and in academia. This book does not only aim at spotting and theorising this return to Forster today. Rather we endeavour to trace its genealogy and shed light on the successive modes of the legacy, from Forsterīs first novel, Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905) onwards, to the novelisation of Forster himself by Damon Galgut. How can the principle of connection, of correspondences and echoes, which informed Forsterīs private life and approach to writing so much, equally characterise the aesthetic and political influence of his oeuvre?
Jeremy Tambling: Civilization and Natural Depravity: On Forster, Melville, Lawrence, and Britten - Tim Mackin: Reconstructing Knowledge in A Passage to India - Aude Haffen: "Well, my England is E. M.": E. M. Forsterīs Legacy to the Auden-Isherwood Generation - Jean-Christophe Murat: The Issues of Liberal Humanism and the Condition of England from E. M. Forster to Angus Wilson - Jean-Michel Ganteau: He Cared: Forster, McEwan, and the Ethics of Attentiveness - Marie Laniel: Tracing "the Heartīs Imagination" in Contemporary British Fiction - Yi-Chuang Elizabeth Lin: The Subject/Object Commodity: From Forsterīs Howards End to Ishiguroīs Never Let Me Go - Christina Root: "Her Way of Walking": Explorations of Nature and the Unseen in Forsterīs Howards End and Robert Macfarlaneīs The Old Ways - Maaz Bin Bilal: E. M. Forsterīs Place in the Long Discourse of Friendship - Catherine Lanone: "Common Garden Variety" or "Rare Bird": the Persistence of E. M. Forsterīs Singular Song - Niklas Fischer: In Timeless Company: E. M. Forster and J. M. Coetzee - Nour Dakkak: Walking, Strolling and Trailing: Ivoryīs Adaptation of Movement in Forsterīs Howards End - Susan Reid: "The Muddling of the Arts": Modernist Rites and Rhythms in Forster, Woolf and McEwan - Julie Chevaux: E. M. Forster and the Obsession for Rhythm: Rewriting "The Story of a Panic" with "The Life to Come" - Alberto Fernández Carbajal: The Postcolonial Queer and the Legacies of Colonial Homoeroticism: Of Queer Lenses and Phenomenology in E. M. Forster, David Lean and Hanif Kureishi - Nicolas Pierre Boileau: Coupling: the "Lost Form" of 20th-Century Literature? Or Only Dis connect - Xavier Giudicelli: Creative Criticism/Critical Creation: E. M. Forster and Alan Hollinghurst - José Mari Yerba: Forsterīs Pastoral Legacy in Trauma Poetics: The Melancholic Neo-Pastoral in Hollinghurstīs The Swimming-Pool Library and The Folding Star - Celia Cruz-Rus: Damon Galgutīs Arctic Summer (2014) in Context