Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brophy, Brigid (Antonia) - Edward Weeks
Brophy, Brigid (Antonia) - Edward Weeks
EDWARD WEEKS
Brigid Brophy, her husband, Michael Levey, and Charles Osborne have concocted what the English would call "a wicked book," Fifty Works of English Literature We Could Do Without…. Their demolition technique is based on two principles: find a defect in a long-revered classic, and then jump on the thing until it is dead; and, second, the most amusing way to push down an esteemed author is to push up a minor writer in his place. But unfair or otherwise, their attack has produced some splendid fireworks, and the fifty works which they have blasted are of such varied assortment that every reader is bound to find among them some old enemies and smile as they are blown sky-high.
The list begins with Beowulf, which is rated "a fine example of primitive non-art." Spenser's The Faerie Queene is dynamited for its "punishing length, utter confusion and unremitting tedium … and monotonous rhyming verses which run endlessly on …" (I...
[The entire page is 327 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Gene Baro
- Pearl Kazin
- Dan Wickenden
- Charles J. Rolo
- Maurice Richardson
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Joseph L. Quinn
- Martin Tucker
- Eve Auchincloss
- Naomi Bliven
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Anthony Burgess
- Victor Strauss
- Anthony Burgess
- Alan Levensohn
- Edward Weeks
- Joyce Carol Oates
- Time
- Hermione Lee
- Alan Hollinghurst
- Marilyn Butler
- Copyright
