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The Last Educations: Genre, Place, and the American UniversityWhite, Lowell Mick 2010 August 1900 (has links)
The Last Educations: Genre, Place, and the American University consists of three
interlocking novellas dealing with themes of change and dislocation in contemporary
Texas, focused on the institution of the modern university, an institution that itself is
undergoing rapid and irreversible change.
Crucial to the dissertation is a thorough understanding and demonstrated proficiency
of the genre of the novella. The creative text will illustrate how the novella can be used to
achieve narrative depth and insight into the changing social context of the contemporary
individual; the critical introduction will discuss the history of the genre and its emergence
in recent years as a powerful vehicle for the depiction of change.
The overall subject of the creative text is change, and the ways in which individuals
react to change—changes to the institutions to which they devote their lives, and changes
in the localities and regions they inhabit. The immediate setting for the novellas is the
contemporary university, an institution currently undergoing transformations which will
have implications for all of American society.
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Outside the Ivory Tower: The Role of Academic Wives in C.P. Snow’s The Masters, Kingsley Amis’s Lucky Jim, and Malcolm Bradbury’s The History Man2015 December 1900 (has links)
Academic fiction in its current form—as novels set on university campuses and focused on the lives of faculty—has existed since the mid-twentieth century. The genre explores the purposes and the cultures of universities and the lives of their faculty. Because universities have traditionally been insular communities that interact little with the outside world, the novels contain few non-academic characters. However, one non-academic group does appear consistently throughout the genre—the academic wives. These characters host parties, care for their husbands and children, and remain largely separate from the university structure. Although they appear in nearly all academic fiction, they have escaped notice by critics because they are secondary characters who exist largely in the background. However, a comparison of academic wives and their roles in C. P. Snow's The Masters (published 1951; set 1937), Kingsley Amis's Lucky Jim (published 1954; set in the early 1950s), and Malcolm Bradbury's The History Man (published 1975; set 1972) shows that these characters contribute significantly to the development of universities' cultures. Their roles both influence and respond to changes within the university structure. The academics' anxiety over the wives' potential influence on university affairs in these novels, and these women’s responses to this anxiety, enable the genre to explore the division between academics and non-academics within the university culture.
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