ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1982, this brilliant study provides a perceptive and up-to-date assessment of the novels of Iris Murdoch, up to and including Nuns and Soldiers, published in 1980. The Fire and the Sun, her book on Plato, is also considered in depth. It is not a critical biography, but rather shows how massive Murdoch’s literary career was at the time and what her contribution has been to aesthetics, literary criticism, the realistic novel, and to the possibilities of ethical and religious action in a horror-filled and secular age. Above all, the book is interested in forwarding Murdoch’s cause among her readers. It is not aimed simply at those who have read and studied all of her novels, the text will appeal to the readers of only a few of them, as well as literary scholars and students of contemporary fiction and modern culture.

chapter I|8 pages

An Introduction to Murdoch’s Work

chapter II|27 pages

Reality and Realism

Characters of the good: Theo in The Nice and the Good, Bledyard in The Sandcastle, Tallis Browne in A Fairly Honourable Defeat, Brendan Craddock in Henry and Cato – Platonic reality and literary realism

chapter III|44 pages

Unconscious Good and the Success of Evil

Problems of realism: Murdoch’s decisions and disjunctions – Characters of unconscious good: Hugo Belfounder in Under the Net, Ann Peronett in An Unofficial Rose – The brilliance of evil: The Time of the Angels

chapter IV|53 pages

Art and Theory

Basic criticism, the theory of The Fire and the Sun and a reading of The Black Prince

chapter V|34 pages

Establishing the Style

From Under the Net to The Nice and the Good

chapter VI|30 pages

Pilgrim’s Progress

From change to defeat in Bruno’s Dream and A Fairly Honourable Defeat

chapter VII|45 pages

The Mediocre Life

Readings of An Accidental Man, A Word Child and The Sacred and Profane Love Machine

chapter VIII|23 pages

Circularity Versus Progress in the Religious Life

A study of The Bell and Henry and Cato

chapter IX|41 pages

The Dangerous Road

Magic in The Unicom and The Sea, The Sea

chapter X|43 pages

The New Murdoch

Protraction and alien forces in Nuns and Soldiers