Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Huxley, Aldous - Maria Schubert (essay date 1984)
Huxley, Aldous - Maria Schubert (essay date 1984)
Maria Schubert (essay date 1984)
SOURCE: “The Use of Irony in Aldous Huxley's Short Fiction,” in On Poets and Poetry, edited by Dr. James Hogg, Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, 1984 pp. 181-214.
[In the following essay, Schubert maintains Huxley's short fiction is mainly concerned with humans' inescapable predestinatio, and that the predominant stylistic device he uses to express this is irony.]
Huxley began his literary career in 1916 with a volume of poems called The Burning Wheel. Four years later Limbo, his first volume of short stories was published, followed by his first novel Crome Yellow in 1921. During the period from 1920 to 1930 Huxley tried all literary genres: he wrote poems, short stories, novels, essays, dramas and travel books. The predominant genre in the 1920s, however, was short fiction, and Limbo was followed by four more volumes of short stories, Mortal Coils (1922),...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Herbert S. Gorman (review date 1920)
- Virginia Woolf (review date 1920)
- William Jacob Cuppy (review date 1922)
- Times Literary Supplement (review date 1924)
- Arnold Bennett (essay date 1924)
- L. P. Hartley (review date 1926)
- Joseph Wood Krutch (review date 1926)
- Henry Hazlitt (review date 1930)
- Kenneth Payson Kempton (essay date 1953)
- P. H. Newby (review date 1957)
- V. S. Pritchett (review date 1957)
- Arthur F. Beringause (essay date 1964)
- Charles M. Holmes (essay date 1970)
- Donald J. Watt (essay date 1970)
- Maria Schubert (essay date 1984)
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