Systems of Order: The satirical novels of Evelyn Waugh is a study of Evelyn Waughs satire. It offers a contextual reading of eleven works by Waugh, presenting revisionist readings of familiar novels and according attention to previously neglected works. It aims to sketch out the main features of Waughs satire, including Waughs lexis and the use of certain key images and motifs. Comparative analysis of Waughs satirical novels with works by contemporary writers such as Clough Williams-Ellis, Wyndham Lewis, Stella Gibbons and T.S. Eliot brings into sharp relief the techniques and targets of Waughs satire.
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This thesis argues that despite Waughs tongue-in-cheek denial of satires efficacy in a complacent modern world, he did indeed write satire of a peculiarly twentieth century kind. Waughs apparently anarchic novels reflect, behind the detached insouciance of their narrators, the moral standards which the novels ostensibly claim are absent in the modern world.
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In Waughs writing, satire is effected through the creation of systems of literary order. The structure and patterning of his novels, and his masterful use of the rhetorical techniques of satire, mete out punishment on a formal level. Waughs satirical novels dramatize the tension between truth, order and civilization, and their oppositions, disorder and barbarism. Systems of Order suggests that from the very first, Waughs satiric project aimed toward the repudiation of modern disorder.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/241113 |
Date | January 2009 |
Creators | Milthorpe, Naomi Elizabeth, naomi.milthorpe@anu.edu.au |
Publisher | The Australian National University. School of Humanities |
Source Sets | Australiasian Digital Theses Program |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Rights | http://www.anu.edu.au/legal/copyrit.html), Copyright Naomi Elizabeth Milthorpe |
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