The satiric campus novel, in its contemporary form, begins with a cluster of novels written in the 1950s: Kingsley Amis’s
Lucky Jim(1954) and Malcolm Bradbury’s
Eating People is Wrong(1959) in Britain; Mary McCarthy’s
The Groves of Academe(1953) and Randell Jarrell’s
Pictures from an Institution(1954) in the United States. But education has been a subject of satire since Aristophanes mocked Socrates in
Clouds(423 BC) and Lucian attacked philosophers and rhetoricians in the second century. Novels of education constitute a recognized category including hundreds of examples. The problem of making distinctions that identify the satiric campus novel is intensified by the tendency of the novel and satire to overlap. But a novel feels like satire when the reader senses that irony,…
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Citation: Knight, Charles. "Satire and the Academic Novel". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 16 May 2005 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=1549, accessed 25 November 2024.]