Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 The art of English fiction in the twentieth century
- 2 The British Empire and the English modernist novel
- 3 Realism and rebellion in Edwardian and Georgian fiction
- 4 The Great War in English fiction
- 5 Postwar modernism in the 1920s and 1930s: The mammoth in the basement
- 6 Regionalism in English fiction between the wars
- 7 Ireland and English fiction
- 8 Feminist fiction
- 9 Working-class fiction across the century
- 10 World War II, the welfare state, and postwar “humanism”
- 11 The Windrush generation
- 12 History in fiction
- 13 Postmodernisms of English fiction
- 14 Detectives and spies
- 15 The post-consensus novel: Minority culture, multiculturalism, and transnational comparison
- 16 An absurd century: Varieties of satire
- 17 The other side of history: Fantasy, romance, horror, and science fiction
- Further reading
- Index
15 - The post-consensus novel: Minority culture, multiculturalism, and transnational comparison
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 The art of English fiction in the twentieth century
- 2 The British Empire and the English modernist novel
- 3 Realism and rebellion in Edwardian and Georgian fiction
- 4 The Great War in English fiction
- 5 Postwar modernism in the 1920s and 1930s: The mammoth in the basement
- 6 Regionalism in English fiction between the wars
- 7 Ireland and English fiction
- 8 Feminist fiction
- 9 Working-class fiction across the century
- 10 World War II, the welfare state, and postwar “humanism”
- 11 The Windrush generation
- 12 History in fiction
- 13 Postmodernisms of English fiction
- 14 Detectives and spies
- 15 The post-consensus novel: Minority culture, multiculturalism, and transnational comparison
- 16 An absurd century: Varieties of satire
- 17 The other side of history: Fantasy, romance, horror, and science fiction
- Further reading
- Index
Summary
A Conservative Party election victory in 1979 inaugurated a post-consensus era in British politics and culture. Decisively opposed to a lingering sense of national collectivity, prime minister Margaret Thatcher's new government promised to liberate all of its constituents from unwanted, outdated social solidarities. But the Thatcher ascendancy redefined liberty by identifying it with divisiveness, and paradoxically by stimulating new constraints. The new government encouraged a resurgence of English nativism, xenophobia, and nostalgia for the British Empire's centrality in international affairs. And it tried to contain the impact of immigrant communities on the languages, literatures, and traditions of Britain. While political and economic conservatism flourished, however, the project of cultural containment was largely unsuccessful. In the age of Thatcher, immigrant novelists such as Kazuo Ishiguro, Timothy Mo, Salman Rushdie, and V. S. Naipaul were transforming the Anglophone literary landscape. Their fiction brought international attention to contemporary British writing, consolidated the Windrush generation's contribution to the English novel, and ensured that geographies, vernaculars, and political histories of India, China, Japan, and the West Indies would have a lasting prominence in English letters. In 1981 Rushdie's Midnight's Children won the Booker Prize, a major international award for English fiction. Since then, the prize (renamed the Man Booker Prize in 2002) has gone to Anglophone novelists who hail from Australia, Ireland, Canada, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, India, South Africa, and Scotland more than it has to writers born in England.
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- The Cambridge Companion to the Twentieth-Century English Novel , pp. 223 - 237Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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