Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Wilson, Angus - Malcolm Bradbury (essay date 1966)
Wilson, Angus - Malcolm Bradbury (essay date 1966)
Malcolm Bradbury (essay date 1966)
SOURCE: "The Short Stories of Angus Wilson," in Studies in Short Fiction, Vol. III, No. 2, Winter, 1966, pp. 117-25.
[An English man of letters, Bradbury is best known as the author of such satiric novels as Eating People Is Wrong (1959) and Stepping Westward (1965). He has also, as a literary critic, written extensively on English and American literature, especially the works of E. M. Forster. In this analysis, he discusses Wilson 's unusual mix of moral realism and absurd, grotesque characters.]
Many of the critics who have commented on Angus Wilson's fiction appear to have seen him as a direct inheritor of a central tradition in English fiction—the socio-moral tradition, which concerns itself with the moral analysis of life in society. Seen in this light, Wilson is a writer who carries on the habitual concerns of storytellers from Jane Austen to Forster into the world of post-Second...
[The entire page is 3829 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
- 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
