Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Patricia Waugh (essay date 1989)

Patricia Waugh (essay date 1989)

SOURCE: “Post-War Women Writers: Challenging the ‘Liberal Tradition,’” in Feminine Fictions: Revisiting the Postmodern, Routledge, 1989, pp. 126-67.

[In the following excerpt, Waugh examines female characters and feminist themes in Brookner's fiction.]

This chapter will consider the work of five post-1945 British and North American women writers whose work has generally been received in terms of an orthodox ‘liberal’ critical reading. Certainly the work of Margaret Drabble, Anita Brookner, Sylvia Plath, and Ann Tyler has been read as formally unadventurous, eschewing the narrative experiment of postmodernist fiction and espousing a broadly realist aesthetic. (The work of Grace Paley has been either ignored or assimilated to a ‘liberal’ reading) In my view, this reading has ignored their significant, though often unobtrusive, formal innovations (no fabulatory fireworks here), and...

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