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| About The Book : | |||
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The
Marxist view of literature, which found expression
through the works of Christopher Caudwell and other
writers of his group, seems to have been consciously
ignored or brushed aside as being merely "
enthusiastic " and of no consequence by a majority
of the critics and scholars. Concealed behind this
apathy and indifference is an ideological hostility
towards Marxism which became very fierce after the
second World War. This study aims at examining the
specific theoretical contribution to the evolution of a
radical literary perspective made by the Marxist critics
in England from Christopher Caudwell to Arnold Kettle.
Although it is primarily an attempt to make an objective
assessment of the total achievement of these critics,
this study has also been governed by an implicit concern
to understand the relevance of their contribution to the
broader intellectual and cultural issues of our time.
The assumption throughout has been that a critical
outlook has a meaning and substance mainly in terms of
its engagement with the live intellectual, moral and
social issues of the historical period in which it
emerged. |
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| CONTENTS IN DETAIL : | |||
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| PREFACE | ||||
| 1. | Breaking The Stalemate | |||
| 2. | Christopher Caudwell : A Pioneering Intelligence | |||
| 3. | Ralph Fox : An Ardent Partisan | |||
| 4. | Edgell Reckword : A Voice of Radical Protest | |||
| 5. | George Thomson : Historian as Interpreter Protest | |||
| 6. | Alick West : Marxist as Proponent of Form | |||
| 7. | Arnold Kettle : Marxist as Humanist | |||
| 8. | Summing Up |
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| ABOUT THE author : | |||
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| Anand Prakash : |
Anand Prakash (b.1942) has taught English Literature in Hans Raj College, Delhi since 1966. Topics on which he has written include contemporary Indo-English Poetry; Brecht's Theory of Drama; The Novels of Mulk Raj Anand; Robert Bolt's A man for All Seasons; Perestroika and literary Theory; Beckett's Waiting for Godot and Leon Trotsky's Literary Thought. He has commented extensively on fictional trends in Hindi Literature. His columns in different periodicals and journals are read with Keen interest. He has been editorially associated with a number a of journals in English and Hindi. His Hindi translation of Georg Lukacs's The Theory of the Novel was published by Macmillan, India in 1981 under the title " Upanyasa Ka Siddhanta. " Recently he has edited a volume ( along with two other scholars ) entitled Indian Response to Nineteenth Century Literature under the series OURSTORY planned by Academic Foundation. Anand Prakash's new book Wuthering Heights : An Interpretation ( Academic Foundation, 1993 ) has earned appreciation from serious students of English Literature. A creative writer, he has published shot stories, a play and a collection of poems in Hindi. Anand Prakash has played an active part in campaigns against communalism, war and violations of academic and political rights. |
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