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The Novel and the Problem of New Life

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The novel since the nineteenth century has displayed a thorny ambivalence toward the question of having children.

In its representation of human vitality it can seem to promote the giving of life, but again and again it betrays a nagging doubt about the moral implications of procreation.

The Novel and the Problem of New Life identifies this tension as a defining quality of the modern British and European novel.

Beginning with the procreative-skeptical writings of Flaubert, Butler, and Hardy, then turning to the high modernist work of Lawrence, Woolf, and Huxley, and culminating in the postwar fiction of Lessing and others, this book chronicles the history of the novel as it came to accommodate greater misgivings about the morality of reproduction.

This is the first study to examine in literature a problem that has long troubled philosophers, environmental thinkers, and so many people in everyday life.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108970567 / 9781108970563
Paperback / softback
03/11/2022
United Kingdom
English
263 pages
Professional & Vocational Learn More
Reprint. Print on demand edition. Originally published: 2021.