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
3 - Realism and rebellion in Edwardian and Georgian fiction
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
The objective and impartial account of the world that realist fiction purports to give its readers is not calculated to foment rebellion, or rally public will to rectify economic injustice, or press for legislative remedies for social wrongs. The Edwardians and the Georgians (people living during Edward VII and George V's successive reigns) wrote about socially inflammatory issues such as marriage and labor laws, property rights, women's suffrage, Home Rule for Ireland, and colonialist rule over an unsettled empire. Yet even when most inflamed, Edwardian and Georgian fiction appealed less to emotional outrage than to the educated heart. Rebel authors, those “dangerous clever fellows with all their atheism, sex and socialism,” as J. B. Priestley drolly characterized them, wrote in “an atmosphere of hopeful debate,” persuaded “that men might be converted to a cause, that society might be rationally transformed, if they could win the debate.”
They carried that debate into novels, through richly detailed representations of the sorry but changeable state of things. Inheriting and refining conventions developed by Victorian and French realism and naturalism, Edwardian realism's documentary machinery was so efficient at presenting social data that Arnold Bennett could envision for fiction the possibility of an “absolute realism.” The possibility had occurred to Bennett in reviewing Chekhov's stories, in which “no part of the truth is left out, no part is exaggerated.” A Chekhovian ideal, translated into the empirical language of British realism, is reflected in meticulous representations of where and how people lived (including building materials, layout, the décor of their houses, apartments or, as the case may be, hovels); inventories of the things they bought and sold, and at what price; detailed accounts of routines that regulated their lives and the wages they earned, or had garnished; candid reports of how they courted, and under what constraints; what class they belonged to; how they made their money and how they held onto - or lost - it.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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