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Psychic Connection and the Twentieth-Century British Novel - by Mark Taylor (Paperback)
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Highlights
- Criticism of the novel routinely starts with the assumption that characters must think, develop and strive for self-fulfilment as individuals.
- Author(s): Mark Taylor
- 192 Pages
- Literary Criticism, Books & Reading
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About the Book
Contends that the twentieth century novel's approach to character fundamentally shifted in response to contemporaneous theories of psychic connectionBook Synopsis
Criticism of the novel routinely starts with the assumption that characters must think, develop and strive for self-fulfilment as individuals. This book challenges the paradigm that individualism is innate to the novel as a medium. It describes how major writers throughout the twentieth century - many convinced by the supposed findings of parapsychology - rejected the idea of the discrete character. Treating the self as porous, they offered novels structured around the development of communities and ideas rather than individuals. By focusing on D. H. Lawrence, Olaf Stapledon, Aldous Huxley and Doris Lessing, Mark Taylor demonstrates the need to broaden our approach to character when addressing the novel of the twentieth century and beyond.Review Quotes
Taylor's book offers a fascinating alternative history of the twentieth-century British novel. While the novel form is often seen as the definitive narrative of individualism, Psychic Connection tracks a different path through telepathy, panpsychism, and visions of collective selves, working through D. H. Lawrence, Olaf Stapledon, Aldous Huxley and Doris Lessing, and ending with a generative reading of the contemporary 'network novels' of David Mitchell. A cogent and consistently compelling counter-narrative.
--Roger Luckhurst, Birkbeck College