The Picturegoers
Encyclopedia
The Picturegoers is the first novel
by British
novelist David Lodge
.
The novel interweaves scenes at and near a neighborhood movie theatre, using movies as a touchstone for exploring Catholic values in a changing world, where the cinema introduces values and behaviors from the greater society that differ from those of the traditional community. Various characters are portrayed, representing, to a certain extent, common types of people in a small earlyish twentieth-century British London neighborhood, though the focus is on one lower-middle-class family.
le roman catholique britannique
contemporain, by
Jean-Michel Ganteau, Voices from British Literature, http://www.paradigme.com/sources/SOURCES-PDF/Pages%20de%20Sources04-3-3.pdf, pp. 152~154.
Novel
A novel is a book of long narrative in literary prose. The genre has historical roots both in the fields of the medieval and early modern romance and in the tradition of the novella. The latter supplied the present generic term in the late 18th century....
by British
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandIn the United Kingdom and Dependencies, other languages have been officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous languages under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages...
novelist David Lodge
David Lodge (author)
David John Lodge CBE, is an English author.In his novels, Lodge often satirises academia in general and the humanities in particular. He was brought up Catholic and has described himself as an "agnostic Catholic". Many of his characters are Catholic and their Catholicism is a major theme...
.
The novel interweaves scenes at and near a neighborhood movie theatre, using movies as a touchstone for exploring Catholic values in a changing world, where the cinema introduces values and behaviors from the greater society that differ from those of the traditional community. Various characters are portrayed, representing, to a certain extent, common types of people in a small earlyish twentieth-century British London neighborhood, though the focus is on one lower-middle-class family.
Literature
- « Conservative Radicalism » :
le roman catholique britannique
contemporain, by
Jean-Michel Ganteau, Voices from British Literature, http://www.paradigme.com/sources/SOURCES-PDF/Pages%20de%20Sources04-3-3.pdf, pp. 152~154.