The techniques of committed fiction: in defense of Julian Barnes's "The Porcupine"

Although some critics had repeatedly trumpeted the death of English satire in the first three quarters of the twentieth century, the frequency with wich the satiric note is sounded in recent fiction is extremely significant. In a period marked by the decline of the British Empire, a greater public a...

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Bibliographic Details
Author: Lázaro Lafuente, Luis Alberto|||0000-0003-3236-9905
Format: article
Publication Date:2000
Country:España
Institution:Universidad de Alcalá (UAH)
Repository:e_Buah Biblioteca Digital Universidad de Alcalá
Language:English
OAI Identifier:oai:ebuah.uah.es:10017/6893
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10017/6893
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Julian Barnes
The Porcupine
Sátira política
Filología
Filología inglesa
Philology
English philology
Description
Summary:Although some critics had repeatedly trumpeted the death of English satire in the first three quarters of the twentieth century, the frequency with wich the satiric note is sounded in recent fiction is extremely significant. In a period marked by the decline of the British Empire, a greater public awareness about civil rights, the strengthening of the feminist movement, and the fall of the Berlin wall, politics still draws the attention of contemporary British satirists. Julian Barnes's novel The Porcupine (1992) is an excellent example, with its acute satire on the current downfall of Eastern European regimes. On its publication, however, this book received extensive hostile attention from critics and reviewers on several grounds, including its "uncommitted quality", its flat characters and its sombre tone. This paper seeks to dispute the negative critical response to The Porcupine by considering this novel within the tradition of British political satire and the draw attention to the author's proper use of conventional satiric strategies, such as caricature, fantasy, irony and detachment, rhetorical devices on which he relies to show the shortcomings and corruption of a Communist country in its transition to a capitalist-democratic state.