Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Wilson, Angus - C. B. Cox (essay date 1963)
Wilson, Angus - C. B. Cox (essay date 1963)
C. B. Cox (essay date 1963)
SOURCE: "Angus Wilson: Studies in Depression," in Critical Essays on Angus Wilson, edited by Jay L. Halio, G. K. Hall & Co., 1985, pp. 81-7.
[In this essay, originally published in Cox's 1963 book The Free Spirit, the critic argues that Wilson's short stories represent a liberal humanist attitude but that the author's pessimism about human life makes his humanist sentiments less idealistic than those of authors like English novelist E. M. Forster.]
The fiction of Angus Wilson provides evidence for the great changes that have taken place in the thinking of liberal humanists during the last hundred years. In fact George Eliot would have found him a very odd humanist indeed. Particularly in the early short stories, his attitude towards human life appears to be one of disgust. There is a revulsion from the body in all his writing, and this saps his work of full vitality. For example, in "Union Reunion" he...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Rosemary Carr Benét (essay date 1950)
- The Times Literary Supplement (essay date 1957)
- Michael Mitigate (essay date 1957)
- C. B. Cox (essay date 1963)
- Angus Wilson (essay date 1963)
- Jay L. Halio (essay date 1964)
- Malcolm Bradbury (essay date 1966)
- Joyce Carol Oates (essay date 1969)
- Robert Kirsch (essay date 1969)
- Angus Wilson with Frederick P. W. McDowell (interview date 1971)
- Peter Faulkner (essay date 1980)
- Averil Gardner (essay date 1985)
- The Wrong Set (1949)
- Such Darling Dodos
- Wilson as a Short-Story Writer
- J. H. Stape (essay date 1987)
- John Bayley (essay date 1988)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
