Erik Svarny
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Gender, war and writing in Aldous Huxley’s ‘Farcical History of Richard Greenow’
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This chapter discusses Aldous Huxley's early novella 'Farcical History of Richard Greenow' as an example of non-combatant war fiction, and offers a reading and critique of this text which examine discourses of gender during the war period. While the fantastic form of 'Farcical History' is distinctive in Huxley's early writing, its central themes of division and self-division are anticipatory of his subsequent development up to and including Brave New World. In the 1920s, Huxley employed the genre of the novel of ideas to examine the disparate modes of intellectual, cultural and political division that were evident in the post-war period and the related modes of self-division that affected the individual. The leading literary voices of the 1920s were to be Huxley and Virginia Woolf, and her anonymous review of Limbo in the TLS is interesting reading.

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