Ian McEwan
Subversive Readings, Informed Misreadings
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:28th Sep '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Hardback£170.00(9781032649450)

This book offers a discussion of seven “canonical” novels by Ian McEwan (The Cement Garden, The Comfort of Strangers, The Child in Time, The Innocent, Black Dogs, Atonement, On Chesil Beach), introducing radical new readings, which are offered not as ultimate and conclusive “solutions” of the textual puzzles, but as possibilities to engage with the text creatively, to enrich the critical consensus and restore interpretative freedom to the readers.
This project formulates a strategy of “inclusive reading” – an approach to the text that does not seek to reduce it to a single interpretation, and yet is comprehensively informed through the analysis of the primary text, critical discussion, authorial comments and the context of the composition. Each reading demonstrates the metafictional structure of the texts, indicating that McEwan’s works may be treated as invitations to roam within their worlds, examining the multiple frames of their structure and the meanings generated thereby. All the chapters attend to submerged, repressed, or deliberately masked voices. The Cement Garden is seen as a multi-layered dream, with a shifting hierarchy of dreamers; The Comfort of Strangers is viewed as an inverted metafiction, with insubstantial characters corrupting more complex heroes; The Child in Time is read as Stephen’s book written for his dead daughter; The Innocent as a memory narrative of Leonard who refuses to notice Maria’s role as a spy. In Black Dogs the over-exposure of unreliability is studied as a screen for personal trauma; in the analysis of Atonement Briony’s claim to authorship is questioned and Cecilia is suggested as an alternative narrative agent.
Finally, examining On Chesil Beach, both characters’ voices are reconstructed in search of the superior narrative power, which in the end is seen to be elusive, as the text seeks to undermine the hierarchy of voices.
Exploring “traces of intertexuality” and presenting interpretations through “informed misreading,” Księżopolska (Univ. of Warsaw, Poland) offers one of the best available discussions of most of McEwan’s major texts (p. 5). Finding support for her readings in McEwan’s papers, archived in Texas, she tends to read McEwan’s books from their endings and then seeks the moments of narrative ambiguity that hint at the narrative’s possible directions. Consequently, the surprise of Briony Tallis’s revelation at the end of Atonement, for instance, is questioned for being less surprising than initially imagined. Harold Bloom’s concept of “misreading” and Mikhail Bakhtin’s dialogism establish an interpretive methodology that is initially brought to bear on a handful of early stories before being employed in clear and careful discussions of seven novels (from Cement Garden to On Chesil Beach). Reviewing McEwan’s papers often reveals the gaps and memory lapses she finds in McEwan’s many public interviews and comments about his work. The section “Concluding Thoughts” seems tacked on and rapidly surveys the nine books, including Saturday and the most recent novel, The Lesson, which were not addressed expansively. Only The Cockroach, with its obvious debt to Kafka, is surprisingly left out.
--B. Diemert, Western University
ISBN: 9781032649467
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 420g
274 pages