1996-1998 Cilt 11 Sayı 1
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11452/31695
Browse
Browsing by BUU Author "Barut, Erol"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item Anlaşılması güç bir yazar George Meredith(Uludağ Üniversitesi, 1998) Barut, Erol; Eğitim FakültesiGeorge Meredith (1828 - 1909) is one of the major literary figures of Victorian England as a novelist, poet and essayist. He wrote satirical novels of the upper classes. His novels include "Beaucamp's Career" (1876), "The Egoist" (1879) and "Diana of the Crossways" (1885). His poetry includes the long narrative sequence "Modern Love" (1862) and "Poems and Lyrics of the Joy of Earth" (1883). He also has another work entitled "On the idea of Comedy and the Comic Spirit". George Meredith is one of the writers whose importance has been revealed in our age. He has a style which is subtle and difficult to be understood now and then. He has a flair for analysing inner world of human beings. Now I am going to give an account of this writer in this study.Item George Gissing and 'New Grub Street'(Uludağ Üniversitesi, 1998) Barut, Erol; Eğitim FakültesiWhenever an author named George in the 19th. and 20th. century is in question, the first authors who come to mind are either George Orwell or George Eliot. Whereas, there are other writers whose first names are George and have a considerable fame not only in the United Kingdom but also outside. They are George Meredith (1828-1909), George Moore (1852-1933) and George Gissing. Of them I am going to write about George Gissing together with his best novel 'New Grub Street' in this study. As a realist writer, George Gissing kept Victorian form and method. However, he depicted the outcasts and misfits of society. He dealt with the dreary aspects of London life. We see his own life story in the novel entitled 'New Grub Street'.Item George Moore: Fransız yazınının etkileri, realizm ve ünlü yapıtı "Esther Waters"(Uludağ Üniversitesi, 1998) Barut, Erol; Eğitim FakültesiGeorge Moore (1852-1933) is an Irish writer who introduced the naturalistic novel to English literature. His best-known novel, "Esther Waters" (1894) relates the story of a religious young woman with an illegitimate son and her struggles against haniship and poverty. He spent some of his life in Paris and was greatly influenced by such French writers as Honore de Balzac, Gustave Flaubert and Emile Zola.When he returned to England, he tried hard to liberate English fiction from its Victorian shackles. His novel "A Mummers 's Wife" was a challenge to the contemporary novel of its time. He brought a new form to English prose. He made every effort for clarity of vision. In doing this he was a luminary rather than an incendiary. It is true to say that George Moore used the forms of French philosophical novel in the English one.