Eating People Is Wrong
by Malcolm Bradbury
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'The funniest book I have read this year' Daily TelegraphForty-year-old university professor Stuart Treece is rather set in his ways, and in the midst of the changing attitudes of the '50s, his encounters with the younger generation are making him feel decidedly alien. When he falls disastrously in love with one of his students all his efforts to acclimatize are hilariously undermined. Timeless and brilliant, Eating People is Wrong is Malcolm Bradbury's first novel, and established him as a show more master of satire. show lessTags
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This was Malcolm Bradbury's first novel, published six years after Kingsley Amis had set the pattern for redbrick campus novels with Lucky Jim. Like Lucky Jim, this is set in a small, provincial university town where students and academics are torn between their inherent middle-class respectability and a feeling that they ought to be rebelling against something. Bradbury takes the whole thing a lot less seriously than Amis, and at times, particularly when a ludicrously badly-behaved poet comes to address the local literary society, he is clearly having a bit of fun sending up the whole "angry young man" idea. On the other hand, there are some telling lines, as when the poet points out that the trouble with English poetry is that there show more are more people writing it than reading it (something that is still true today!).
Obviously, any novel that takes its title from a Flanders and Swann song is ipso facto worth reading, but it might come as a shock to readers who've started out with Bradbury's most famous novel, The history man, to find themselves plunged back into this very 1950s world, where motor scooters and espresso machines are the bleeding edge of innovation, and people wear duffel coats, go to dances at the town hall, and turn up at parties with bottles labelled "British wine, port type". It's worth persevering with, though: there are a lot of good things to discover along the way. show less
Obviously, any novel that takes its title from a Flanders and Swann song is ipso facto worth reading, but it might come as a shock to readers who've started out with Bradbury's most famous novel, The history man, to find themselves plunged back into this very 1950s world, where motor scooters and espresso machines are the bleeding edge of innovation, and people wear duffel coats, go to dances at the town hall, and turn up at parties with bottles labelled "British wine, port type". It's worth persevering with, though: there are a lot of good things to discover along the way. show less
Malcolm Bradbury sends up the 1950s "provincial" [15 occurrences] English university department and "liberal" [27 occurrences] faculty entertainingly, but I found the situations and humour painfully dated in this novel of inward-looking postwar English academic attitudes and experiences. To my mind, the novels of his friend David Lodge reflect more enduring character types and contexts.
Acquired via BookCrossing 30 May 2009 - from Julie & Barry's boxes for BookCrossing
I picked this one out of the boxes as I have enjoyed reading The History Man a couple of times. This was a great read - hilarious goings-on in the English Dept of a provincial University. It probably helps if you've *been* in an English dept but the general academic atmosphere makes it a funny read on many levels. Treece is an excellent 1950s anti-hero and the goings on at parties etc makes for wince-worthy and unputdownable reading. The atmosphere changed a bit towards the end but still a good read. Interesting afterword by the author but he doesn't answer the question - is the truly dreadful Willoughby a portrait of David Lodge, his friend and rival in show more real life, or is it an amalgam of a few people?! show less
I picked this one out of the boxes as I have enjoyed reading The History Man a couple of times. This was a great read - hilarious goings-on in the English Dept of a provincial University. It probably helps if you've *been* in an English dept but the general academic atmosphere makes it a funny read on many levels. Treece is an excellent 1950s anti-hero and the goings on at parties etc makes for wince-worthy and unputdownable reading. The atmosphere changed a bit towards the end but still a good read. Interesting afterword by the author but he doesn't answer the question - is the truly dreadful Willoughby a portrait of David Lodge, his friend and rival in show more real life, or is it an amalgam of a few people?! show less
A very funny novel about a small college in a provincial Britain. As is usual in this sort of novel there is a collection of more or less eccentric students and professors who interact professionally and amorously. The novel stands up over time in spite of a great deal of somewhat dated and topical humor. Professor Treece and a social-misfit student, Louis Bates both ultimately are defeated by society and, by the end, seemed doomed to unhappy lives.
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A professor of English literature and American studies who has published numerous critical works, Malcolm Bradbury is also a novelist whose protagonists are academics who make muddles of their personal and professional lives. He maintains that his main concern is to explore problems and dilemmas of liberalism and issues of moral responsibility. show more The targets of Bradbury's satires include intellectual pretension, cultural myopia, and official smugness. His protagonists are largely sympathetic, if comic, failures at mastering their own fates in a world of absurd rules and regulations. His major novels include Eating People Is Wrong (1959), Stepping Westward (1965), and The History Man (1975). This last, a novel of intellectual and political conflict at an English university in the late 1960s, was made into a successful television minidrama. More recent novels include Rates of Exchange (1983) and Cuts (1987). (Bowker Author Biography) Malcolm Bradbury is a novelist, critic, television dramatist, & satirist. His many books include "Rates of Exchange", which was short-listed for the Booker Prize, & "The Modern American Novel". (Publisher Provided) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1959
- Important places
- United Kingdom
- Epigraph
- What men or gods are these? What maidens loth?
What mad pursuit? What struggle to escape?
What pipes and timbrels? What wild ecstasy?
Do I say man is not made for an active life? Far from it. But there is a great difference between other men's occupations and ours. A glance at theirs will make it clear to you. All day long they do nothing but calculate, con... (show all)trive, consult how to wring profit out of foodstuffs, farms and the like. But I entreat you to understand what the administration and nature of the world is, and what place a being endowed with reason holds in it; to consider what you are as a person, and in what your good and vil consists.
EPICTETUS - Dedication
- To my mother and father
- First words
- Term had just begun.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)She went away, and he lay there in his bed and felt as though this would be his condition for evermore, and that from this he would never, never escape.
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- ISBNs
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