Fotografía de autor

C. N. Manlove (1942–2020)

Autor de Modern Fantasy

17+ Obras 163 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Obras de C. N. Manlove

Obras relacionadas

The Aesthetics of Fantasy Literature and Art (1982) — Contribuidor — 13 copias
J. R. R. Tolkien, der Mythenschöpfer (1984) — Autor — 7 copias
Gramarye 1 (2012) — Editor — 2 copias
Gramarye 10 (2016) — Editor — 2 copias
Gramarye 11 (2017) — Editor — 1 copia
Gramarye 12 (2017) — Editor — 1 copia
Gramarye 13 (2018) — Editor — 1 copia
Gramarye 14 (2018) — Editor — 1 copia
Gramarye 15 (2019) — Editor — 1 copia
Gramarye 16 (2019) — Editor — 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Manlove, Colin Nicholas
Fecha de nacimiento
1942-05-04
Fecha de fallecimiento
2020-06-01
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Scotland
Lugar de nacimiento
Falkirk, Scotland, UK
Ocupaciones
teacher, university
literary critic
writer
scholar
Organizaciones
University of Edinburgh
Premios y honores
IAFA Distinguished Scholarship (1989)

Miembros

Reseñas

Summary: A study focusing on and surveying the fantasy literature of England, distinguishing it from that of other countries, identifying six types, and discussing a tremendous variety of writers.

For most of us, when we hear of English fantasy, we think of J.R.R. Tolkien, or C.S. Lewis, or Charles Williams. If we think further, we might include Lewis Carroll, A.A. Milne and George MacDonald (actually Scottish). Also, we tend not to think of English fantasy having a particular character. This book opens up our bibliography of English authors far beyond the few I’ve mentioned. And the author maintains that there is a particular character to English fantasy distinguishing it from other countries.

To begin, Manlove defines fantasy as “a fiction involving the supernatural or impossible,” fitting what he sees as an English preoccupation with the supernatural. Beyond this simple definition, Manlove identifies six types that define the structure of the book, one chapter on each. First of all, there is second world fantasy, the outstanding example of which is The Lord of the Rings. Metaphysical fantasy involves the presence of the supernatural. Charles Williams novels are a good example. The third type is emotive fantasy is characterized as works that evoke feelings from wonder to horror, from Kenneth Grahame to M.R. James (who wrote ghost stories). Comic fantasy involves “parody, satire, nonsense or play. Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels is a recent example. The fifth follows, subversive fantasy, reflects the rise of postmodernism and the fixities of reason, morality, or reality. Peter Ackroyd’s Hawksmoor is an example of this type. Children’s fantasy is his last type. Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll or Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia.

For each type, Manlove surveys the literature from its earliest examples to the most contemporary (in his case, the late 1990’s). He explores both themes under each type and offers brief descriptions of a number of the works. With many authors, there is overlap, and they will turn up in the discussion of several types. This can be dizzying at times, keeping track of the various authors and themes. I was unfamiliar with many of the works, which I think would help in following the discussion.

Manlove draws together the threads of these different types and summarizes the distinctives of English fantasy. His first conclusion is the sheer diversity of material, a fact not appreciated by many readers including this one. There is an expansiveness to this literature, an emphasis on the social circle (the fellowship of the ring), a general inclination away from ambiguity, the conquest of chaos by order, and an ultimately conservative character.

There are several things I wish the author would have done. Some subheadings in chapters might have made following the thread of his discussion easier amid the avalanche of authors discussed. While authors are listed in the text and index, a bibliography of authors, perhaps by the types would be very useful to readers. Finally, the book could no doubt use an updating, for Harry Potter alone!

Nevertheless, I came away with a number of new ideas for authors to explore. I appreciated the distinctions of type, and Manlove opened my eyes to the national character of fantasy literature. This is a good resource both for scholars and readers of fantasy literature wanting to go deeper in reading the literature of England.

____________________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary review copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. The opinions I have expressed are my own.
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Denunciada
BobonBooks | Dec 21, 2020 |
This is definitely a book that caters more to academic readers than to casual fans of the Harry Potter series. The feel of the book was somewhat more 'scholarly' than a 'light read' &, overall, I found the going hard. I'm not one who can abandon a book halfway through; the English, or general structure, has to be pretty horrific before I contemplate an early escape, and so I stuck this book out. However, I must say I was glad to reach the end. I felt like I'd been wading through the literary equivalent of treacle.

That's not to say the text was bland, and certainly interesting points and comparisons were covered. Christian, & other, symbolism was looked at at length, as well as comparing the Harry Potter series to other well-known literary series and contemplating what, if any, influence JK Rowling may have drawn from them.

In short: If you are lucky enough to be attending a literary class that is dissecting the Potter universe, then this would be an interesting book to read to gain an extra insight into JK Rowling's work.

General fans will probably find this book tough going though.
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Denunciada
K.Llewellin | Jul 7, 2013 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
17
También por
10
Miembros
163
Popularidad
#129,735
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
45

Tablas y Gráficos