Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwan

Ian McEwan (born 1948), one of the most outstanding contemporary British writers, is brought to the literary forefront thanks to the current social, ethical issues and aesthetic virtues of his works and belonging to the New Time British Gothic tradition whose foundations were laid by Shakespeare and...

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Main Author: Tatiana N. Krasavchenko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Russian Academy of Sciences, A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature 2024-09-01
Series:Studia Litterarum
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Online Access:https://studlit.ru/images/2024-9-3/09_Krasavchenko.pdf
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author Tatiana N. Krasavchenko
author_facet Tatiana N. Krasavchenko
author_sort Tatiana N. Krasavchenko
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description Ian McEwan (born 1948), one of the most outstanding contemporary British writers, is brought to the literary forefront thanks to the current social, ethical issues and aesthetic virtues of his works and belonging to the New Time British Gothic tradition whose foundations were laid by Shakespeare and his younger contemporaries (John Webster, John Ford, et al.). One finds basic topoi of literary Gothic in their tragedies: horror as an inescapable component of human existence; evil and villains who violate the moral norm in society; castle as a setting; fatal secret; supernatural element; motives of violence, revenge, adultery, incest and most importantly — of God and devil. Of course, Shakespeare is multiform and is not limited to Gothic. Like Shakespeare, who as a tragedian started with a “bloody tragedy” (Titus Andronicus) and then used its techniques in his great tragedies, McEwan began with a “thriller” (The Сement Garden, 1978), based on the motifs of fatal secret and incest. His later novel Nutshell (2016) is a modern version of Shakespeare’s Hamlet written in line with the realities of the 21st century. “Intertextual game” (usual for postmodernism) is not the main thing for McEwan here. Nutshell is his aesthetic-philosophical declaration of the adherence to Shakespeare’s tradition. In this novel, he creates the image of his time and shows that civilization has achieved tremendous scientific and technological success over four centuries, but human nature hasn’t changed. Despite all the historical and sociocultural differences, the image of the world in McEwan’s novels is similar to the world of Shakespeare’s tragedies — cold, full of horror and death, abandoned by God.
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spelling doaj-art-6e4e67d9dc7f4b24b9d076d076a7835e2025-08-20T02:06:28ZengRussian Academy of Sciences, A.M. Gorky Institute of World LiteratureStudia Litterarum2500-42472541-85642024-09-019319821510.22455/2500-4247-2024-9-3-198-215Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwanTatiana N. Krasavchenko0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5479-7957Institute of Social Sciences Information (INION) of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, RussiaIan McEwan (born 1948), one of the most outstanding contemporary British writers, is brought to the literary forefront thanks to the current social, ethical issues and aesthetic virtues of his works and belonging to the New Time British Gothic tradition whose foundations were laid by Shakespeare and his younger contemporaries (John Webster, John Ford, et al.). One finds basic topoi of literary Gothic in their tragedies: horror as an inescapable component of human existence; evil and villains who violate the moral norm in society; castle as a setting; fatal secret; supernatural element; motives of violence, revenge, adultery, incest and most importantly — of God and devil. Of course, Shakespeare is multiform and is not limited to Gothic. Like Shakespeare, who as a tragedian started with a “bloody tragedy” (Titus Andronicus) and then used its techniques in his great tragedies, McEwan began with a “thriller” (The Сement Garden, 1978), based on the motifs of fatal secret and incest. His later novel Nutshell (2016) is a modern version of Shakespeare’s Hamlet written in line with the realities of the 21st century. “Intertextual game” (usual for postmodernism) is not the main thing for McEwan here. Nutshell is his aesthetic-philosophical declaration of the adherence to Shakespeare’s tradition. In this novel, he creates the image of his time and shows that civilization has achieved tremendous scientific and technological success over four centuries, but human nature hasn’t changed. Despite all the historical and sociocultural differences, the image of the world in McEwan’s novels is similar to the world of Shakespeare’s tragedies — cold, full of horror and death, abandoned by God.https://studlit.ru/images/2024-9-3/09_Krasavchenko.pdfpostmodernismcontemporary british novelgothic traditionmainstreamshakespeare“protogothic” and “neo-gothic” world-imagethriller
spellingShingle Tatiana N. Krasavchenko
Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwan
Studia Litterarum
postmodernism
contemporary british novel
gothic tradition
mainstream
shakespeare
“protogothic” and “neo-gothic
” world-image
thriller
title Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwan
title_full Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwan
title_fullStr Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwan
title_full_unstemmed Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwan
title_short Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwan
title_sort shakespearean tradition in the contemporary british novel ian mсewan
topic postmodernism
contemporary british novel
gothic tradition
mainstream
shakespeare
“protogothic” and “neo-gothic
” world-image
thriller
url https://studlit.ru/images/2024-9-3/09_Krasavchenko.pdf
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