University Press Copublishing Division / Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Pages: 188
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-61147-846-4 • Hardback • June 2016 • $97.00 • (£75.00)
978-1-61147-847-1 • eBook • June 2016 • $92.00 • (£71.00)
James Clawson is assistant professor of English at Grambling State University.
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1 Subject and Object
Chapter 2 Reality and Fiction
Chapter 3 City and World
Chapter 4 Past and Future
Chapter 5 Modern and Postmodern
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
In reading James Clawson’s dense and widely-researched “re-read” of Durrell’s major works, I was taken into Durrell from a direction that opened up new insights and gave me reasons to reread the books myself. . . . for the Durrell aficionado, the effort is well worth investing in. Clawson’s eye for detail and his rigorous exploration of his theme of liminality is a rich contribution to scholarship on the work of Lawrence Durrell.
— Deus Loci: The Lawrence Durrell Journal
Several Durrell studies sought "the whole," but Clawson reveals something new: what produces the wholeness of Durrell's "opus." Durrell described Alexandria as "a hybrid, a joint," which tells us more of Durrell than Egypt. The wholeness of Durrell's works comes from this liminality, the joints that connect difference in a general arthrology. Clawson's conclusion is inescapable and important to modern British literature widely conceived: that Durrell's coherence lies not in continuity but in the contiguity of liminal moments of transition.— James Gifford, Professor of English, Fairleigh Dickinson University
James Clawson’s incisive, comprehensive analyses offer a whole range of innovative understandings of Durrell’s oeuvre – of its diversities as well as overarching unities – and a clear, enabling perspective on the complex mid-twentieth century literary allegiances shaping its unique vision.— Randall Stevenson, Professor of Twentieth-Century Literature, University of Edinburgh
This new book claims for Lawrence Durrell his rightful position at the heart of twentieth-century literature in English. Creatively rereading the disparate major fictions as a unified “opus,” James Clawson establishes a lucid framework for apprehending the instabilities of time and space, life and death, art and reality that mark Durrell’s liminal world.— Anne R. Zahlan, Professor Emerita, Eastern Illinois University