Evelyn Waugh
-
Standard Name: Waugh, Evelyn
Birth Name: Evelyn Arthur St John Waugh
EW
was a twentieth-century novelist whose startling black humour goes together with devastating satire and a low estimate of unredeemed human nature (whether he is fictionalizing the failings of other people or of himself). He is remembered not only for his novels but for his prolific journalism, travel writing, biography and autobiography, and for his posthumously published letters and diaries. His resolutely unmodernised Catholicism
and his Toryism
(more social and romantic than political) were not always beneficial to his work and until well after his death inflicted serious damage to his literary reputation, making him a bugbear to a generally liberal intellectual establishment.
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Nina Hamnett | Rebecca West
was not charmed: her review likened NH
to a character in Evelyn Waugh
's Vile Bodies and commented on the book's idiot gusto curiously combined with a strong suicidal impulse. qtd. in Booth-Clibborn, Edward, and Nina Hamnett. “Introduction”. Laughing Torso, Virago, 1984, p. v - x. v |
Textual Production | Winifred Holtby | WH
's inspiration for the novel came from reports of the coronation of the Emperor of Abyssinia
in 1930. Shaw, Marion, and Winifred Holtby. “Introduction”. Mandoa, Mandoa!, Virago, 1982, p. ix - xix. xi-xii |
Occupation | Elizabeth Jane Howard | EJH
also free-lanced in journalism and on television. She appeared on discussion programmes about books (which were more plentiful in those days) and was also asked to appear on the political programme Table Talk... |
Literary responses | Elizabeth Jane Howard | Arthur Koestler
described this, before publication, as a cross between Nancy Mitford
and Evelyn Waugh
. When EJH
told him she was having trouble finishing it, he said she had finished it, and written beyond... |
Intertextuality and Influence | P. D. James | PDJ
followed the English tradition of detective-story writing that has continued from the 1920s and 1930s, a genre in which many women have held dominant positions. She spoke of her adolescent reading as influenced in... |
Reception | Elizabeth Jenkins | The book received some appreciative reviews, but there were others which argued that EJ
was culpable in her use of real events which were so traceable. The Time and Tide notice (by a reviewer whom... |
Author summary | Elizabeth Jolley | EJ
, writing in the later twentieth century, was called the most comical and disturbing writer working in Australia today. Bird, Delys, and Brenda Walker, editors. Elizabeth Jolley: New Critical Essays. Angus and Robertson, 1991. back-cover |
Performance of text | Bryony Lavery | A rather different stage adaptation by BL
, of Evelyn Waugh
's Brideshead Revisited, opened as the inaugural production at the newly redeveloped Hickling, Alfred. “Brideshead Revisited review—Waugh’s charming men hit the stage in style”. theguardian.com, 5 May 2016. |
Textual Production | Rose Macaulay | Over the years, RM
published several dozen literary articles in a wide range of magazines, newspapers, and commemorative volumes. She wrote on past and contemporary literary figures, including Leslie Stephen
, Stella Benson
, Rebecca West |
Textual Features | Olivia Manning | The first trilogy draws on OM
's experience of the early years of the Second World War in eastern Europe. In both trilogies, British national concerns are disconcertingly filtered through people whose priorities and loyalties... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Nancy Mitford | Three of NM
's sisters took up extreme political positions in the 1930s. Diana
, the third in age, left her first marriage to be with Sir Oswald Mosley
, leader of the British Union of Fascists |
Friends, Associates | Nancy Mitford | It was during her debutante period that NM
met Evelyn Waugh
, who became her lifelong friend, correspondent, and literary mentor. |
Literary responses | Nancy Mitford | The Blessing did not do so well as its two predecessors; Antonia Fraser
feels that it marked a decline in fictional achievement. Fraser, Antonia. “A Most Superior Street”. Spectator.co.uk. Champagne for the brain. |
Publishing | Nancy Mitford | The essay was provoked by a scholarly article, Upper Class English Usage, published in an academic journal in 1954 by Professor Alan Ross
. The terms U, for upper-class, and Non-U, for... |
Textual Production | Nancy Mitford | Describing NM
's letters as an essential part of her artistic output, Mitford, Nancy. “Critical Materials”. Love from Nancy: The Letters of Nancy Mitford, edited by Charlotte Mosley, Hodder and Stoughton, 1993, p. various pages. vii |
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