Elizabeth Bowen’s Suburbia: Life After the Big House

Authors

  • Derek Hand

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37389/abei.v7i1.184268

Keywords:

Elizabeth Bowen, The Disinherited, Big House

Abstract

This essay focuses on Bowen’s short story “The Disinherited”. It is an appropriate title because it deals with a world of disempowered aristocrats who inhabit the new world of housing estates and suburbia, ghostly remnants of an older order. What elevates this story beyond a simple lament for an impotent aristocracy is the introduction of the character Prothero: a murderer on the run who is presented writing the story of his crime night after night. He is a mysterious and ultimately threatening image of modernity and all that it may entail. It is a story that essentially draws a picture of the conflict between the old world and the new world, between those who are “made” out of a class structure which is passing away and those who “made” themselves. In “The Disinherited” Bowen allows herself to express her very real fears about the emergence of a new world order where power and authority have shifted away from her class and caste. The element that gives “The Disinherited” such a menacing air is the presence of the character Prothero. It allows Bowen to widen her focus beyond the new middle classes and the failed aristocracy and consider, in the person of Prothero, those whom she believes are set to inherit the modern world.

Author Biography

  • Derek Hand

    DEREK HAND teaches in the English Department in St. Patrick’s College, Drumcondra. He is interested in Irish writing in general – and Irish fiction in particular – and has published numerous articles on W.B. Yeats, Elizabeth Bowen and on contemporary Irish fiction. The Liffey Press published his book John Banville: Exploring Fictions in 2002. He is presently writing A History of the Irish Novel for Cambridge University Press. He is also editing a forthcoming special edition of the Irish University Review on John Banville. He is a frequent reviewer of Irish fiction for the Irish Times.

References

Heath, William. Elizabeth Bowen: An Introduction to her Novels. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 1961.

Lassner, Phyllis. Elizabeth Bowen: A Study of the Shorter Fiction. New York: Twayne Publishers, 1991.

Weekes, Ann Owen. Irish Women Writers: An Uncharted Tradition. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky, 1990.

Downloads

Published

2005-06-30

Issue

Section

Fiction

How to Cite

Hand, D. . (2005). Elizabeth Bowen’s Suburbia: Life After the Big House. ABEI Journal, 7(1), 143-150. https://doi.org/10.37389/abei.v7i1.184268