Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Of Human Bondage Maugham, W. Somerset - Bonnie Hoover Braendlin (essay date 1984)
Of Human Bondage Maugham, W. Somerset - Bonnie Hoover Braendlin (essay date 1984)
Bonnie Hoover Braendlin (essay date 1984)
SOURCE: "The Prostitute as Scapegoat: Mildred Rogers in Somerset Maugham's Of Human Bondage," in The Image of the Prostitute in Modern Literature, edited by Pierre L. Horn and Mary Beth Pringle, Frederick Ungar Publishing, 1984, pp. 9-18.
[In the following excerpt, Braendlin discusses the character of Mildred Rogers, arguing that Rogers is cast as a "threatening female" who serves as villain, victim, and scapegoat and is sacrificed for her sins.]
Scarcely any other character in modern British fiction has been disparaged as unanimously as Mildred Rogers, the supercilious waitress turned prostitute in Somerset Maugham's early-twentieth-century Bildungsroman, Of Human Bondage (1915). Critics of the novel have nearly all regarded Mildred solely from the author's viewpoint, perhaps because Maugham's naturalistic, detailed style so convincingly characterizes her as an immoral "slut"...
[The entire page is 3399 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- W. Somerset Maugham (essay date 1915)
- R. Ellis Roberts (review date September 1915)
- William Morton Payne (review date 16 September 1915)
- S. P. B. Mais (essay date 1923)
- Marcus Aurelius Goodrich (essay date 25 January 1925)
- Dorothy Brewster and Angus Burrell (essay date October 1930)
- Theodore Spencer (essay date October 1940)
- W. Somerset Maugham (speech date 20 April 1946)
- Robert Spence (essay date Spring/Summer 1951)
- John R. Reed (essay date 1964)
- M. K. Naik (essay date 1966)
- Bonnie Hoover Braendlin (essay date 1984)
- Forrest D. Burt (essay date 1985)
- Joseph Dobrinsky (essay date October 1985)
- Archie K. Loss (essay date 1990)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
