CHAPTER II. Contemporary British writers. Literature is a mirror of a
nation.
2.1. English Authors: The 10 Best English Writers In Histor
Throughout the canon of greats, British writers loom heavily around the top
echelons. With a hybrid poetic language creating the perfect spindle to weave their
magic, from the modernists to the Angry Young Men, The Culture Trip London
takes a look at some of the greats from over the last 100 years; writers whose
output has assured them an everlasting place among the greatest of all time.
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Virginia Woolf
One of the greatest of modernist writers, Woolf‘s timeless works effuse a
certain crisp, clear, clarity of which most writers can only dream. As though her
only peace of mind was attained through her visionary creativity, her tragic end
often overshadows the absolute mastery of her art. From the 24-hour perfection of
Mrs.
Dalloway, through to the psychoanalytical meanderings of The Waves –
Virginia Woolf
rarely put a foot wrong in her 59 years gracing planet earth and
influencing everyone thereafter.
Iris Murdoch
A consummate writer whose elegant prose and literary philosophical style
mirrored that of great classic writers such as Eliot and Proust
, Iris Murdoch
‘s
heavily textured and layered novels explored relationships through sexual mores,
good and evil and the pernicious subconscious ego of the human psyche which
could rear its head when least expected. Along with other writers of her generation,
she embraced the left, which impacted on her success as a writer, being refused a
visa to visit the
USA
. It wasn‘t until much later in her career that she was granted a
6
―Oscar Wilde. Selections‖. М.:‖ Прогресс‖, 1979. (Article M.Urnov
).
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visa – under supervision. In 1978, she won The Booker Prize for what has perhaps
proved to be her most enduring novel, The Sea, The Sea, a searing yet subtle saga
of overwhelming resentment, envy, love and loss – familiar themes in Murdoch‘s
writing. In 1998, Under the Net, her first published novel, was chosen for Modern
Library‘s 100 best English-language novels from the 20th century.
Alan Sillitoe
One of the ‗Angry Young Men‘ writers of the 1950s, Sillitoe is best known
for his debut novel, the maverick social commentary Saturday Night And Sunday
Morning, and the film adaptation of Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner.
Sillitoe dislike
d his ‗angry young man‘ tag, but its heritage is clear. A writer
bestowed with that most perfect of creative gifts – zeitgeist – Sillitoe beckoned in
the ‘60s with his soon-to-be hip colloquial realism.
John Braine
Another of the ‗Angry Young Men‘, Braine is best known for his
novels Room At The Top and The Crying Game. His enormous imprint on
contemporary modernism, as with Sillitoe, lies as much in his writing as it does in
the 20th century‘s great artistic achievement – film. The 1959 big screen adaption
of Room At The Top brought the book to a wider audience. Depicting the struggles
and ambitions of Joe Lampton, a young man of humble origin, the film hit a nerve
with its crippling, stultifying personal articulation and portrayal of post-war socio-
economic strife in Bradford,
Braine‘s birthplace. Millions were watching.
Peter Shaffer
Shaffer, who recently passed aged 90, was one of Britain‘s leading
playwrights. A
writer of challenging, award-winning work including Five Finger
Exercise, for which he won the coveted New York Drama Critics Circle Award for
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Best Foreign Play, it is Equus and Amadeus for which he will always be known, as
both were highly successful, award-winning, controversial plays that were made
into equally successful, award-winning, controversial films. Equus delved into the
mind of a disturbed 17-year-old boy guilty of committing an act of supreme cruelty
by blinding six horses. Amadeus, on the other hand, takes as its subject the rivalry
between Mozart and court composer Salieri, who, consumed by bitterness and
jealousy, ultimately only succeeds at destroying himself in facing his own nemesis.
Shelagh Delaney
Born in Salford in 1938, Delaney managed to fail her 11 Plus four times
before going on to become the poster girl for 1960‘s ‗kitchen sink realism‘ with
her 1958 classic play, A Taste Of Honey.
Although not realising it at the time,
Delaney was giving a great everlasting two fingers to the tired old establishment
clique that had ruled British showbiz for too long. She wrote her first play in ten
days, inspired after seeing Terence Rattigan‘s Variations on a Theme and feeling
she could better Rattigan. A writer of immense talent whose vision of Salford life
was as real as its creator‘s astonishing ambition.
Ian Fleming
It was whilst working for the Naval Intelligence in the Second World War,
and subsequently as a journalist, that
Fleming
fashioned the character of the secret
service agent the world now knows as 007. Initially a keen birdwatcher, Fleming
conceived Bond as ‗dull and uninteresting‘ in order to be an effective spy, naming
him after the American ornithologist James Bond. The first Bond novel, Casino
Royale, was viewed with indifference by its eventual publisher. It took the
intervention of his brother, who shared the same publisher, to persuade the
company to finally publish it. It was first released in hardback in 1952 and proved
against expectation to be a success. Eleven Bond novels followed, and now about
100 million copies have been sold worldwide. During this time, Fleming
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engendered a much-imitated style of writing, developing Bond‘s character into the
ruthless, joie de vivre, super-agent often reliant on his relationship with the CIA. It
was, however, a relationship which, as a result of Fleming‘s growing
disillusionment with America, tends to change in the later novels. In 1961, the film
rights were bought by producers Harry Salzman and Cubby Broccoli – Dr No
starring Sean Connery as Bond being the first to go into production, launching a
hugely profitable industry which continues to this day. It is perhaps a lesser-known
fact that Fleming also wrote Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and short story collections
Anthony Burgess
Born in 1917,
John Anthony Burgess Wilson
began his writing career in the
1950s whilst working for the Colonial Office in Malaya with his novel Time for a
Tiger. Possessed by a great flair for languages, he invented his own language,
Nadsat – the Anglo-
Russian
teen language – used in arguably his most renowned
work, the dystopian A Clockwork Orange. Reputedly written in under a month ‗for
money‘ and based on personal experiences endured during the Second World War,
it catapulted Burgess into the literary limelight and remains to this day as one of
the most contentious of novels. Director
Stanley Kubrick
‘s subsequent highly
personalised film adaptation caused outrage with its explicit content. Burgess,
however, continued to claim that much of the novel was misunderstood. Apart
from his substantial literary output, Burgess was also an accomplished composer,
his inspiration being Claude Debussy. He is on record as wanting people to think
of him as a ‗musician who writes novels, rather than a novelist who writes music‘.
His vibrant, outspoken autobiography Little Wilson and Big God is a testament to
a towering intellect and one of the most distinguished British literary figures of the
latter part of the 20th century.
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Kingsley Amis
Having produced a considerable body of work throughout his life,
Kingsley
Amis
is perhaps best noted for his debut novel, Lucky Jim. Published in 1954, the
novel, a satire on new university academic life, challenges many of the norms of
the time and made its author an overnight literary sensation. He aligned himself
very much with the left, having embraced Communism whilst at
Oxford
, as his
early novels reflect – each possessing an inherently ironic acerbic wit and
compassion. Such a style, however, began to change in the ‘70s. He moved
inexorably to the right, producing work such as the controversial Russian Hide and
Seek, whilst later returning to former themes with The Booker Prize-winning,
The
Old Devils
. He also produced volumes of poetry (considering himself first and
foremost a poet), verse and critical essays. Knighted in 1990, Amis was an
undoubted major literary figure who ranks high amongst the English literary roll
call of influential post-war writers.
Margaret Drabble
Bursting onto the literary scene in 1963 with her novel A Summer Bird
Cage,
Margaret Drabble
has explored an analogous theme depicting mannered,
conservative contemporary society, its triumphs, calamities, heartbreaks,
restrictions and economic misfortunes, most usually through the eye of a female
protagonist and has, to date, published 18 novels. Recurring themes such as
encountering unexpected personal hardship, betrayal, corrosive stoicism and the
lack of benevolence take centre stage. Critical studies of Wordsworth and Hardy
are also amongst her literary output. As a writer who believes the pen to be
mightier than the sword, she was vociferous in her attitude towards the 2003
invasion of
Iraq
, recalling
Orwell
‘s warning of ‗the intoxication of power‘ and ‗the
thrill of victory, the sensation of trampling on an enemy who is helpless. If you
want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face – forever‘.
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