Stockard, EmilyUnknown
Springer International Publishing (Cham, Switzerland , 2021) (eng) English9783030838683Unknown1st ed.PYM, BARBARA; UnknownThe Making of Barbara Pym offers new insights into Pym’s formative years as a writer, during which she honed a complex view of the necessity of change on individual and cultural levels. Supported by newly published archival material, this comprehensive study of Pym’s early work explores her personal and fictional pre-war and wartime writing, including unpublished and posthumously published works, before looking closely at Some Tame Gazelle and Excellent Women, published during Britain’s post-war austerity period. Of central importance is a new recognition of Pym’s use of social roles, particularly those of women, as proper avenues for change. The book traces how Pym came to devise characters whose individual development can be seen as analogous to or representative of larger cultural movements. Pym uses the spinster figure to embody the forward-looking cultural perspectives that she endorsed and then, finally, in Jane and Prudence, to figure the end of Britain’s austerity period.
Physical dimension
1 online resource (xviii, 234 p.)UnknownUnknown
Summary / review / table of contents
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Elements of Continuity: Youth and the Oxford Years
Chapter 3: The War Years: Surprising Continuities
Chapter 4: Crampton Hodnet: The Continuous Cycle
Chapter 5: Some Tame Gazelle: Continuity and Contentment
Chapter 6: Excellent Women: A Continuous Role
Chapter 7: Jane and Prudence: The End of Austerity