A.J. Cronin - his life and work. Peculiarities of writing style in his novel
A.J. Cronin - his life and work. Peculiarities of writing style in his novel “Hatter’s castle”
Plan:
INTRODUCTION 4 CHAPTER I. THE AGE OF MODERNISM. 6 1.1.History of modernism 6 1.2. Archibald Joseph Kronin is his life and literary activity. 13 CHAPTER II. CHARACTERISTICS OF WRITING STYLE IN THE NOVEL "HATTER’S CASTLE". 17 2.1.Archibald Joseph Cronin's style of writing. 17 2.2. The novel The Fortress of the Cap. Themes and characters. 23 CONCLUSION 32 REFERENCES 33
Relevance of the topic. The article raises the subject of life and many film and television productions of the extensive and controversial literary work of the Scottish physician Archibald Joseph Cronin (1896-1981). At the same time, we would like to highlight the impact of his books and / or films based on them on the many young generations who have chosen the medical field under their auspices. The award-winning writer and doctor of science, formally adorned with his great talent for illustration and observation, he mixes naturalism, conflicting passions, medical situations, and social criticism in his works. In addition to all the controversy about his literary activities and his influence on cinema, there is no denying his influence on those who embraced medicine, following in the footsteps of his protagonists, many of whom reflect themselves.
AJ Kronin (1896-1981) was a Scottish physician and writer, whose most famous novel being The Fort ress, published in 1937. The book describes the struggles of a young idealist physician who worked in Wales and London in the 1920s and 1930s. The novel became a worldwide bestseller, and its depiction of an inefficient, corrupt health care system had a direct impact on the founding of the National Health Service in 1948. The Citadel expects events such as evidence-based medicine and continuing medical education. . This article states that the novel was never intended to promote a state-controlled National Health Service. In contrast, Kronin was opposed to state control. The analysis of the novel is based on Kronin’s recent biographical revelations and the blurring of the boundary between reality and fiction.his life and work are being studied.
AJ Kronin (1897-1981), a writer less familiar to those under the age of fifty, was probably the most successful writer in English in the 1930s. His most famous novel, The Castle, was published in 1937. The book paints an unfortunate portrait of some areas of British medicine in the interwar years. The book is believed to have influenced the results of the 1945 British general election and the subsequent creation of the National Health Service (NHS) by Labor. In 1948 the government. AJ Kronin’s famous story is a heartbreaking novel about pride and greed and their horrible punishment.
When her father forced her to drop out of school and cut all ties with her past and future, Mary Brody’s entire life became a narrow compass of her family’s cold and uncomfortable home in a small Scottish town.
His rude and ambitious father oppressed his cowardly, obedient wife, his dreadful, overworked youngest daughter, and his spineless son. The four were in Brody's ruthless hands, just like the breath of the outside world that Brody so despised, a young Irishman, in which Mary found her forbidden freedom and brought much-needed freedom to her mother and sister.