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The Cambridge Companion to E. M. Forster
Hardback
Main Details
Description
This collection of essays, each one by a recognized expert, provides lively and innovative readings of every aspect of Forster's wide-ranging career. It includes substantial chapters dedicated to his two major novels, Howards End and A Passage to India, and further chapters focus on A Room With a View and Maurice. Forster's connections with the values of Bloomsbury and the lure of Greece and Italy in his work are assessed, as is his vexed relationship with Modernism. Other essays investigate his role as a literary critic, the status of his work within the genres of the novel and the short story, his treatment of sexuality and his attitude to and representation of women. This was the most comprehensive study of Forster's work to be published for many years, providing an invaluable source of comment on and insight into his writings.
Author Biography
David Bradshaw is Reader in English Literature at the University of Oxford, and Hawthornden Fellow and Tutor in English at Worcester College, Oxford.
Reviews' ... a fascinating register of historical fissures and tensions in Forster criticism and will appeal to a wide readership.' The Review of English Studies 'It is an accessible and detailed treatment of the many themes in Forster's work as well as the contradictions and problems which beset him and which can be traced through his writing.' Reference Reviews
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