In 2016: David Lodge recounts his ongoing guerrilla war against taboos
A model of British meritocracy
David Lodge was born a few years before the war, on January 28, 1935, a “fairly favorable” time to be born for a future writer in England, he said, in a style typical of his deadpan humor.
He grew up in a modest environment, in the south suburbs of London, where university was “uncharted territory”. The writer is a pure product of the meritocracy of England in the 1950s. Pushed by his college teachers, this talented student entered University College London to study literature.
In 1960, he began teaching English literature at the University of Birmingham, where he spent his entire career. The same year, he published his first novel The Picturegoersfollowed in 1962 by Ginger, you’re barmy.
The triumph of the campus trilogy
It is with his campus trilogy – Change of scenery (1975), A very small world (1984) et Board game (1988) – that he demonstrated the extent of his talent.
Drawing inspiration from his own experience as a professor, and in particular from a long study trip to the United States, he describes with biting irony the university environment through two representatives of this “minority with exacerbated puritanism”, the Englishman Phillip Swallow and American Morris Zapp. The first volume earned him the prestigious Hawthorndern Prize, which recognized him as an author, courted by television, which adapted some of his works. In his bestseller Therapy (1995), he sketches the world of media elites, particularly television.
The final part of his autobiography, Réussir, plus ou minus, was published in French in 2023.
About it: Writer’s privilege according to David Lodge
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