This article is devoted to the analysis of the novel ―The Bell‖ by XX century’s British writer Iris Murdoch from the existentialistic point of view. The Bell‖ perhaps the finest of the novels, traces the disintegrating relationships between a set of characters who seek in a Benedictine lay community ―a retreat from human frailty‖. They represent ―a kind of sick people, whose desire for God makes them unsatisfactory citizens of an ordinary life, but whose strength or temperament fails them to surrender the world completely‖. The Bell is Iris Murdoch’s fourth novel, first published in 1958. The plot of it focuses on the religious lay community that lives at Imber Court
This article is devoted to the analysis of the novel ―The Bell‖ by XX century’s British writer Iris Murdoch from the existentialistic point of view. The Bell‖ perhaps the finest of the novels, traces the disintegrating relationships between a set of characters who seek in a Benedictine lay community ―a retreat from human frailty‖. They represent ―a kind of sick people, whose desire for God makes them unsatisfactory citizens of an ordinary life, but whose strength or temperament fails them to surrender the world completely‖. The Bell is Iris Murdoch’s fourth novel, first published in 1958. The plot of it focuses on the religious lay community that lives at Imber Court
№ | Author name | position | Name of organisation |
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1 | Rahmonkulova Z.N. | teacher | Department of Linguistics and Literature Uzbekistan State University of World Languages |
№ | Name of reference |
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1 | 1. Iris Murdoch. (1958). ―The Bell‖. |
2 | 2. Victoria Stanhope. Iris Murdoch (1919-1999). // Off Our Backs. The International Women's News. – March, 1999, Vol. 29, No. 3. - 5 |
3 | 3. Walter Allen. (1968). Contemporary novelists (fourth edition). - London and Chicago. |
4 | 4. Walter M. Humes. (May, 1972). The problem of identity in the novels of Iris Murdoch.- University of Aberdeen |
5 | 5. https://www.philosophybasics.com/movements_existentialism.html |