Anglo-Saxon Attitudes
Anglo-Saxon Attitudes is a satirical novel by Angus Wilson, published in 1956. It was Wilson's most popular book, and many consider it his best work. [1]
Contents |
Plot
Anglo-Saxon Attitudes recounts the continuing significance of two events that happen, on the same day, prior to the opening of the novel. The first is the excavation of an ancient and valuable archeological idol, a phallic figure unearthed from the tomb of an Anglican bishop, known as the "Melpham excavation". The second is that Gerald Middleton falls in love with Dollie, the fiancée of his best friend Gilbert, who is involved with the Melpham excavation. Gerald has an affair with Dollie when his friend goes off to fight in WWI, but when Gilbert is killed, Dollie refuses to marry him. Gerald marries a woman named Inge but continues his affair with Dollie, who becomes a slutty alcoholic. Gerald and Inge divorce.
When the novel opens, Gerald has increasingly suspected that the Melpham find is a hoax, perpetrated to embarrass Gilbert's father. He feels ashamed that he has not investigated the matter thoroughly, which is compounded by his shame in the failures of his romantic life. Anglo-Saxon Attitudes is replete with side-plots, coincidences, and a plethora of pompous English characters. The ending is happy: Gerald convinces Dollie to come forward with a letter from Gilbert's father's colleague, Canon Portway, proving that the Melpham incident was a hoax, then he and Dollie reconcile into platonic friendship.
The central theme of the novel was suggested to Wilson from several contemporary archeological disputes, most notably the Piltdown man hoax and an accusation that the Elgin marbles had been mishandled by the British Museum. [2] Although the work is still delightful, both the language and style seem archaic for a mid-20th century novel, when read today.
Movie
The novel was made into a television movie in 1992, with a screenplay by Andrew Davies[3] and Wilson, Tara Fitzgerald in a supporting role, and a brief appearance by 16-year-old Kate Winslet[4]The film won the BAFTA award for best serial drama; Davies and the lead actor, David Brown, also won awards, from the Writers' Guild of Great Britain and the Broadcasting Press Guild, respectively.
The phrase "Anglo-Saxon attitudes"
"Anglo-Saxon attitudes" is a phrase spoofed by Lewis Carroll in Through the Looking Glass (1871):
- "All this was lost on Alice, who was still looking intently along the road, shading her eyes with one hand. 'I see somebody now!' she exclaimed at last. 'But he's coming very slowly—and what curious attitudes he goes into!'
- (For the Messenger kept skipping up and down, and wriggling like an eel, as he came along, with his great hands spread out like fans on each side.)
- 'Not at all,' said the King. 'He's an Anglo-Saxon Messenger—and those are Anglo-Saxon attitudes.'"
The phrase has also been used as the title of several subsequent literary works. [5]
Notes
- ^ "Widely considered Wilson's finest achievement" http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=4746 (Marina MacKay, Washington University in St. Louis, "Sir Angus Wilson," The Literary Encyclopedia 8 Jan. 2001.
- ^ Notes by Angus Wilson http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/bai/anglo.html
- ^ The movie was made primarily because Davies got into an argument with ITV over the quality of their programming, and rather heatedly decided to find a good novel that had not been put on film and adapt it himself with a first-class screenplay.
- ^ This movie actually led to Winslet attaining the appearance she has in such movies as Sense and Sensibility and Titanic. She had always been heavy and was known as "Blubber" in school. When she saw the film, she realized that she had gotten the role largely because of her resemblance to the overweight actress who played her mother, and also realized how limited her career would be at 180 pounds. She got the assistance of her (real) mother, who herself had spent time in Weight Watchers, and dropped almost 50 pounds. Although hardly svelte, she spent her ingenue years at a time when curvaceous women such as she, Rachel Weisz, and Jennifer Connelly had returned to popularity.
- ^ When John Maddocks reviewed Carleton S. Coon's The Origin of Races for the first issue of New York Review of Books in February 1963, the header was "Anglo-Saxon Attitudes". And when a new museum was opened at Canterbury in Kent, on the site of St. Augustine's abbey, History Today headed its report, "Anglo-Saxon Attitudes".Anglo-Saxon Attitudes was also the name of an historical conference "in pursuit of the English" to define the evolution of the English cultural self-image. It was held at the University of Salford, on July 9–11, 1999.
External links
Categories
Articles to be split | 1992 films | British television films | Films based on fiction books | British novels | 1956 books

