Atonement, by Ian Mcewan
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Atonement : the Individual Progress of a Female Artist and the Evolution of Literary Conventions in the Postmodern Narrative by Ian Mcewan
T.C. İstanbul Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı Bilim Dalı Yüksek Lisans Tezi Atonement : The Individual Progress of a Female Artist and the Evolution of Literary Conventions in the Postmodern Narrative by Ian McEwan Nuria Zinnurova 2501010679 Tez Danı şmanı: Prof. Dr. Zeynep Ergün Düzeltilmi ş Tez İstanbul, 2006 DÜZELTME METN İ Tez içerisinde anlam bütünlü ğünün sa ğlanması için bazı bölümler çıkarılmı ş ve yeni düzenlemelere gidelerek,bazı bölümlere yeni alıntılar ve yeni açıklamalar eklenip akıcılık sa ğlanmı ştır. Birçok cümle yeniden yazılmı ş, bazı paragrafların düzenlemeleri, bazılarının ise yerleri de ğiştirilmi ştir. Bunlara ek olarak tez metninde saptanan gramer hatalar düzeltilmi ştir. 2 TEZ ONAYI İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı Bilim Dalının 2501010679 numaralı örencisi Nuria Zinnurova’nın hazırladı ğı “ Atonement : The Individual Prorgess of a Female Artist and the Evolution of Literary Conventions” konulu YÜKSEK L İSANS TEZ İ ile ilgili TEZ SAVUNMA SINAVI , Lisansüstü Ö ğretim Yönetmeli ği’nin 10. Maddesi uyarınca..................günü saat.............’de yapılmı ştır, sorulan sorulara alınan cevaplar sonunda adayın tezinin..........................’ne* OYB İRL İĞİ / OYÇOKLU ĞUYLA karar verilmi ştir. JÜR İ ÜYES İ KANAAT İ İMZA ....................................................................................................................................... ....................................................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................................................... -
The Concept of Irony in Ian Mcewan's Selected Literary Works
Univerzita Palackého v Olomouci Filozofická fakulta Katedra anglistiky a amerikanistiky Bc. Eva Mádrová Concept of Irony in Ian McEwan’s Selected Literary Works Diplomová práce PhDr. Libor Práger, Ph.D. Olomouc 2013 Prohlašuji, že jsem tuto diplomovou práci na téma “Concept of Irony in Ian McEwan’s Selected Literary Works” vypracovala samostatně pod odborným dohledem vedoucího práce a uvedla jsem všechny použité podklady a literaturu. V Olomouci dne Podpis I would like to thank my supervisor PhDr. Libor Práger, Ph.D. for his assistance during the elaboration of my diploma thesis, especially for his valuable advice and willingness. Table of contents Introduction 6 1. Ian McEwan 7 2. Methodology: Analysing irony 8 2.1 Interpreter, ironist and text 8 2.2 Context and textual markers 10 2.3 Function of irony 11 2.4 Postmodern perspective 12 3. Fiction analyses 13 3.1 Atonement 13 3.1.1 Family reunion ending as a trial of trust 13 3.1.2 The complexity of the narrative: unreliable narrator and metanarrative 14 3.1.3 Growing up towards irony 17 3.1.4 Dramatic encounters and situations in a different light 25 3.2 The Child in Time 27 3.2.1 Loss of a child and life afterwards 27 3.2.2 The world through Stephen Lewis’s eyes 27 3.2.3 Man versus Universe 28 3.2.4 Contemplation of tragedy and tragicomedy 37 3.3 The Innocent 38 3.3.1 The unexpected adventures of the innocent 38 3.3.2 The single point of view 38 3.3.3 The versions of innocence and virginity 40 3.3.4 Innocence in question 48 3.4 Amsterdam 50 3.4.1 The suicidal contract 50 3.4.2 The multitude -
Intertextuality in Ian Mcewan's Selected Novels
1 Intertextuality in Ian McEwan's Selected Novels Assist. Prof. Raad Kareem Abd-Aun, PhD Dijla Gattan Shannan (M.A. Student) Abstract The term intertextuality is coined by poststructuralist Julia Kristeva, in her essay “Word, Dialogue and Novel” (1969). The underlying principle of intertextuality is relationality and lack of independence. In this paper, this technique (intertextuality) will be discussed in Ian McEwan's selected novels. The novels are Enduring Love (1997), Atonement (2001), and Sweet Tooth (2012). Key Words: intertextuality, McEwan, Enduring Love, Atonement, Sweet Tooth. التناص في أعمال روائية مختارة ﻹيان مكيون أ.م. د. رعد كريم عبد عون دجلة كطان شنان أستخدم مصطلح التناص ﻷول مرة من قبل الناقدة جوليا كرستيفا في مقالتها )الكلمة و الحوار و الرواية( عام 1969. إن المبدأ الرئيس خلف التناص هو العﻻقة وعدم وجود اﻹستقﻻلية. وفي هذا البحث، ُدرست هذه التقنية في روايات مختارة ﻹيان مكيون، والروايات هي الحب اﻷبدي )1997( و الغفران )2001( و سويت تووث )2012(. الكلمات المفتاحية: التناص؛ مكيون؛ الحب اﻷبدي؛ الغفران؛ سويت تووث. 2 Intertextuality in Ian McEwan's Selected Novels Ian McEwan (1948) is one of the most significant British writers since the 1970s, this is due his way of the link between morality and the novel for a whole generation, in ways that befit the historical pressures of their time. This makes his novels have a significant form of cultural expression McEwan’s early works are characterized by self – ambiguity in which he is tackling important social themes within the fictional scenario. His early narrative is described as “snide and bored”, or as “acutely dysfunctional or the abusive”, at other times as “inexplicaply lawless”. -
Ian Mcewan's Atonement
UNIVERZITA PALACKÉHO V OLOMOUCI Pedagogická fakulta Katedra anglického jazyka ANETA VRÁGOVÁ III. ročník – prezenční studium Obor: Anglický jazyk se zaměřením na vzdělávání – Německý jazyk se zaměřením na vzdělávání IAN MCEWAN’S ATONEMENT: COMPARISON OF THE NOVEL AND THE FILM ADAPTATION Bakalářská práce Vedoucí práce: Mgr. Josef Nevařil, Ph.D. Olomouc 2015 Prohlášení: Prohlašuji, že jsem závěrečnou práci vypracovala samostatně a použila jen uvedených pramenů a literatury. V Olomouci (datum) ……………………………………………… vlastnoruční podpis I would like to thank Mgr. Josef Nevařil, Ph. D. for his assistance, comments and guidance throughout the writing process. CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................... 6 1. BIOGRAPHY OF IAN MCEWAN ...................................................................... 7 1.1. BIOGRAPHY ................................................................................................... 7 1.2. LITERARY OUTPUT ...................................................................................... 8 1.3. AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL ASPECTS ................................................................ 9 2. POSTMODERNISM .......................................................................................... 12 3. COMPARISON OF THE NOVEL ATONEMENT AND THE FILM ADAPTATION ......................................................................................................................... 14 3.1. NOVEL: GENERAL INFORMATION ........................................................ -
The Sense and Sensibility in Later Novels of Ian Mcewan (Bachelor’S Thesis)
Palacký University in Olomouc Philosophical Faculty Department of English and American Studies The Sense and Sensibility in Later Novels of Ian McEwan (Bachelor’s thesis) Eva Pudová English Philology - Journalism Supervisor: PhDr. Libor Práger, PhD. Olomouc 2016 I confirm that I wrote this thesis myself and integrated corrections and suggestions of improvement of my supervisor. I also confirm that the thesis includes complete list of sources and literature cited. In Olomouc .................................. I would like to thank my supervisor, PhDr.Libor Práger, PhD, for his support, assistance and advice. Table of Contents Table of Contents .................................................................................................... 4 Introduction ............................................................................................................. 5 1. Ian McEwan ..................................................................................................... 7 2. Other works...................................................................................................... 9 3. Critical perspective ........................................................................................ 11 4. Characters ...................................................................................................... 14 4.1. Realness of the characters ...................................................................... 14 4.2. Character differences and similarities .................................................... 16 5. -
S POST-MILLENNIAL NOVELS ZDENĚK BERAN Ian Mcewan
2016 ACTA UNIVERSITATIS CAROLINAE PAG. 123–135 PHILOLOGICA 1 / PRAGUE STUDIES IN ENGLISH METAFICTIONALITY, INTERTEXTUALITY, DISCURSIVITY: IAN MCEWAN ’ S POST-MILLENNIAL NOVELS ZDENĚK BERAN ABSTRACT In his twenty-first-century novels, Atonement, Saturday, Solar and Sweet Tooth, Ian McEwan makes ample use of narrative strategies characteris- tic of postmodernist writing, such as metafictionality, intertextuality and discursive multiplicity. This article discusses how this focus distinguish- es his recent novels from earlier ones. Thus Sweet Tooth is read as a text which includes the author ’ s attempt to revise his own shorter texts from the onset of his career in the mid-1970s. The use of parallelisms and alle- gory in McEwan ’ s 1980s novels The Child in Time and The Innocent is then contrasted with more complex strategies in Saturday and Solar. Special attention is given to the thematization of the role of discourse in Solar; it is argued that the novel is not just a satire on modern science and its corrup- tion by commercialization but also a reflection of “ontological relativism” as a product of prevailing contemporary discourse formations. Keywords: contemporary British novel; Ian McEwan; discourse; Foucault; intertextuality; metafiction Ian McEwan ’ s recent novel, Sweet Tooth (2012), reveals the author ’ s proclivity for the use of metafictional writing at its most entangled and transgressive best. After more than three successful decades on the British literary scene,1 McEwan has here offered his 1 The outstanding position of Ian McEwan as one of the most successful contemporary English writers can be documented by the many literary awards his work has received across decades: His early col- lection of short stories First Love, Last Rites (1975) won the Somerset Maugham Award in 1976. -
Take the Class!
Gibbs High School 2015-2016 Summer Reading English IV Advanced Placement "Literature and Composition" Instructor: Rob Ryan Contact Information: [email protected] Assignments Due Date: Friday, August 14, 2015 - regardless of which semester you take the class! Overview There will be three required readings for this summer. The first two are Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley, and The Tragedy of Macbeth, by William Shakespeare. The third you may choose from among these works: The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison (NOTE: This is not The Invisible Man by Wells), Beloved by Toni Morrison, or Great Expectations by Charles Dickens. This packet contains several assignments to be completed for your first major grade of the course. The assignments will be explained during the 12 AP meeting and will be due on the first day of class. If you need to contact me during the summer for further clarification, call (865) 938-0847 and leave a message. These are the Manuscript requirements for ALL assignments: Papers will be one-sided, double-spaced, Times New Roman font size 12, and a minimum of 500 words in length. Your name, my name, the course title, and the due date (the first day of classes) will appear in four lines at the top right-hand side of the first page. Title will appear on page one—no title page! Papers will be stapled at upper-left corner—no folders! Papers not conforming to requirements will be rejected. Assignment #1 Part One: Read Brave New World. Brave New World is a novel written in 1931 by Aldous Huxley and published in 1932. -
ATONEMENT" Author(S): KATHLEEN D'angelo Source: Studies in the Novel, Vol
"TO MAKE A NOVEL": THE CONSTRUCTION OF A CRITICAL READERSHIP IN IAN McEWAN'S "ATONEMENT" Author(s): KATHLEEN D'ANGELO Source: Studies in the Novel, Vol. 41, No. 1 (spring 2009), pp. 88-105 Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/29533916 Accessed: 30-08-2017 19:53 UTC REFERENCES Linked references are available on JSTOR for this article: http://www.jstor.org/stable/29533916?seq=1&cid=pdf-reference#references_tab_contents You may need to log in to JSTOR to access the linked references. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://about.jstor.org/terms The Johns Hopkins University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Studies in the Novel This content downloaded from 198.137.20.10 on Wed, 30 Aug 2017 19:53:17 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms "TO MAKE A NOVEL": THE CONSTRUCTION OF A CRITICAL READERSHIP IN IAN McEWAN'S ATONEMENT KATHLEEN D' ANGELO Much of the critical response to Ian McEwan's novel Atonement has focused on the metafictional elements of the work's narrative structure, as well as Briony Tallis's revelation in the final pages that she in fact authored the text. -
David Le Barzic Ian Mcewan Bibliographie © 2001-2003 De David Le Barzic
David Le Barzic Ian McEwan Bibliographie © 2001-2003 de David Le Barzic LE TEXTE EWANIEN : ŒUVRES DE FICTION Les traductions françaises disponibles sont indiquées entre crochets sous l’ouvrage anglais. Romans The Cement Garden. Londres : Picador (Jonathan Cape), 1978. [Le jardin de ciment. Trad. Claire Malroux. Paris : Points Seuil, 1980.] The Comfort of Strangers. Londres : Picador (Jonathan Cape), 1981. [Etrange séduction (Un bonheur de rencontre). Trad. J. Pierre Carasso. Paris : Points Seuil, 1983.] The Child in Time. Londres : Picador (Jonathan Cape), 1987. [L’enfant volé. Trad. Josée Strawson. Paris : Folio Gallimard, 1993.] The Innocent. Londres : Picador (Jonathan Cape), 1990. [L’innocent. Trad. Jean Guiloineau. Paris : Points Seuil, 1992.] Black Dogs. Londres : Jonathan Cape, 1992. [Les chiens noirs. Trad. Suzanne V. Mayoux. Paris : Folio Gallimard, 1994.] Enduring Love. Londres : Jonathan Cape, 1997. [Délire d’amour. Trad. Suzanne V. Mayoux. Paris : Gallimard, 1999.] Amsterdam. Londres : Jonathan Cape, 1998. [Amsterdam. Trad. Suzanne V. Mayoux. Paris : Gallimard, 2001.] Atonement. Londres : Jonathan Cape, 2001. Nouvelles en recueils First Love, Last Rites. Londres : Picador (Jonathan Cape), 1975. In Between the Sheets. Londres : Picador (Pan Books/Jonathan Cape), 1978. [Sous les draps et autres nouvelles. Trad. Françoise Cartano. Paris : Folio Gallimard, 1997.] Nouvelles hors recueils “Intersection.” Tri-Quarterly 34 (aut. 1975) : 63-86. “Untitled.” Tri-Quarterly 35 (hiv. 1976) : 62-3. “Deep Sleep, Light Sleeper.” Harpers & Queen, (08/1977) : 83-6. Fiction pour enfants Rose Blanche (avec Roberto Innocenti). Londres : Jonathan Cape, 1985 (basé sur un récit de Chrisophe Gallaz). The Daydreamer. Londres : Vintage, 1994. [Le rêveur. Trad. José Strawson. Paris : Gallimard, 1999.] Pièces de télévision et dramatiques The Imitation Game : Three Plays for Television. -
Joanna Dzikowska MA Intro+References
SPOŁECZNA AKADEMIA NAUK W ŁODZI KIERUNEK STUDIÓW : FILOLOGIA Joanna Dzikowska Numer albumu: 42866 Life deconstructed and reconstructed: Memories in Atonement and On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan Praca magisterska napisana w Społecznej Akademii Nauk w Łodzi, Wydział Zamiejscowy w Warszawie, pod kierunkiem dr Małgorzaty Milczarek Warszawa 2014 e-mail: [email protected] Table of contents TABLE OF CONTENTS …………………..……………………….…….………………… 2 INTRODUCTION ………..………………………….…………………….…….………….. 3 CHAPTER ONE: NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES IN THE 20 TH CENTURY …..….….... 5 1.1. MODERNISM AND MRS DALLOWAY BY VIRGINIA WOOLF AS AN EXAMPLE OF A MODERNIST NOVEL .…………..…………………….…… 8 1.2. POSTMODERNISM AND THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT’S WOMAN BY JOHN FOWLES AS AN EXAMPLE OF A POSTMODERNIST NOVEL ….............. 17 CONCLUSIONS …………...………...…………………...…...……………………. 26 CHAPTER TWO: MEMORIES INVENTED AND THE FORM OF THE NARRATIVE IN ATONEMENT ……………………………..………………………. 27 2.1. NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES AND LITERARY STYLES …...…………...…. 29 2.2. COUNTERFACTUALS AND EVALUATIVE STANCE ………...…..…...….. 35 2.3. MEMORIES ……………………………………………………………………. 37 CONCLUSIONS …………………….……..……….…...………………………..… 46 CHAPTER THREE: DISRUPTIVE MEMORIES AND THEIR NARRATIVE REPRESENTATION IN ON CHESIL BEACH ……..……….… 48 3.1. NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES AND LITERARY STYLES …….....………..… 50 3.2. TRAUMA AND DENIAL ……………………....……………...…………….... 58 3.3. MEMORIES …………...………………………………………….……...…….. 59 CONCLUSIONS ……………………………………..………..…….……………… 67 CONCLUSIONS ……………….……………….…………………..……………………... 69 REFERENCES ……………...………………………………………..……………………. -
Glimpses of Id Domination and Abreaction in Ian Mcewan's First
DOI: https://doi.org/10.24113/ijellh.v8i1.10333 Glimpses of Id Domination and Abreaction in Ian McEwan’s First Love, Last Rites Shivani Singh Research Scholar Department of English and Foreign Studies Dr.Shakuntala Misra Rehabilitation University Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India [email protected] Abstract First Love, Last Rites, a collection of short stories by Ian McEwan was published in 1975. This was the first work written by McEwan that consist eight short stories with estranged and perplexed themes. Ian McEwan received a mixed reaction of criticism as well as appreciation by the readers. The stories are usually of fifteen to twenty pages with the following titles – “Solid Geometry”, “Homemade”, “Last Day of Summer”, “Cocker at the Theatre”, “Butterflies”, “Conversation with a Cupboard Man” and “First Love, Last Rites” and “Disguise”. The author has also included a short story named after the title of his collection. There are numerous aspects in the stories where either the narrators or the protagonists talk about their suppressed emotions or fulfilled desires without being concerned about the societal norms and environment around them. This paper will analyse eight short stories of McEwan in light of the psychoanalytical terms, ‘Id Domination’ and ‘Abreaction’. www.ijellh.com SMART MOVES JOURNAL IJELLH ONLINE ISSN: 2582-3574 PRINT ISSN: 2582-4406 Vol. 8, Issue 1, January 2020 87 Keywords – Id, Abreaction, First Love Last Rites, Psychoanalysis, Ian McEwan “Culturally, we are neither puritanical nor ‘liberated’. Just profoundly confused”. -Ian McEwan (First Love, Last Rites xii) Ian McEwan was born in 1948 in the British military town of Aldershot. -
Forms and Functions of Houses As Spatial Settings in Select Novels by Ian Mcewan
Forms and Functions of Houses as Spatial Settings in Select Novels by Ian McEwan Diplomarbeit zur Erlangung des akademischen Grades einer Magistra der Philosophie an der Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz vorgelegt von Sonja SAURUGGER am Institut für Anglistik Begutachter: O.Univ.-Prof. Mag.art. Dr.phil. Werner Wolf Graz, 2014 Table of Contents 1. Introduction.....................................................................................................5 2. The Contemporary English Novel and Ian McEwan: A Synthesis of Tradition and Innovation .......................................................................................7 3. The Relevance of Space in Literature: The ‘Spatial Turn’...........................10 4.1. A Fruitful Interdependence: House and Literature........................................................ 13 4.2. Gaston Bachelard and the Poetics of Space: “The house […] is a ‘psychic state’”...... 14 4.2.1. The Vertical Perspective: The House and the Mind......................................... 15 4.2.2. The Horizontal Perspective: The House and its Surroundings ........................ 15 4.2.3. The house as refuge for the inner life............................................................... 17 5. The Great Good Place: The English House and its Garden .........................18 5.1. The Country House as a Literary Symbol..................................................................... 20 5.2. The Country House Overlooking the Garden ............................................................... 21 5.3.