The first book to explore the representation of reading and its often deleterious consequences in modern fiction The first book to explore the representation of the effects of reading and its often deleterious consequences in modern fiction Explores the construction and transformations of the modernist reader Chronicles the fusion of reading and sexual desire from Oscar Wilde to Ian McEwan Details the interplay of aesthetics, ideology, and interpretation in key modernist texts Redraws the historical arc of literary modernism Identifies the material aspect of books and the physical aspects of reading Many major modernists - including Henry James, Joseph Conrad, James Joyce, Ford Madox Ford, Katherine Mansfield, Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner, Elizabeth Bowen, Vladimir Nabokov and Ralph Ellison - wrote central scenes describing characters reading. In most cases, the readers depicted suffer unfortunate fates. Intriguingly, the act of reading is also often intertwined with sexual activities. The Reader in Modernist Fiction analyses the construction of fictional readers, tracing their development and transformation over the first half of the twentieth century. Brian Richardson explores how the effects of reading are represented within modernist and postmodern fiction, and studies misreading as a personal limitation, sexual invitation, aesthetic allegory and ideological critique.
The Reader in Modernist Fiction