The day's work

The day's work1997
About this book
Although Kipling has never lost his hold on a large and admiring public, recent years have witnessed an increasing critical interest in his work. This book approaches Kipling as a writer who, from the outset of his career, sensed a potential or actual horror at the heart of things. It examines Kipling's search for meaning, a research pursued on the political, moral, and religious planes, through original and highly sophisticated explorations of history and myth.
It presents Kipling as a person who knew and understood his own suffering and used it in his search for strategies to deal with the temptations of pessimism that he had known and also the prevailing temptations in a political and intellectual crisis he felt obliged to address.
Details
- First published
- 1997
- OL Work ID
- OL1931876W
Subjects
Criticism and interpretationDidactic fiction, EnglishEnglish Didactic fictionEnglish Psychological fictionHistory and criticismOrder in literaturePsychological fiction, EnglishSacrifice in literatureKurzgeschichteErzählungOpfer (Motiv)Kipling, rudyard, 1865-1936Psychological fiction, history and criticismDidactic literature, history and criticism