Complete Works of Evelyn Waugh: Robbery Under Law


Book Description

This volume is part of the Complete Works of Evelyn Waugh critical edition, which brings together all Waugh's published and previously unpublished writings for the first time with comprehensive introductions and annotation, and a full account of each text's manuscript development and textual variants. The edition's General Editor is Alexander Waugh, Evelyn Waugh's grandson and editor of the twelve-volume Personal Writings sequence. This is the first fully annotated critical edition of Waugh's book on Mexico, Robbery Under Law: The Mexican Object-Lesson (1939), based on three months' research by Waugh in the country in 1938 and rarely included in later reprints of Waugh's travel writings. Waugh insisted in its opening words: 'This is a political book'; it traced the expropriation of British and American oil interests in Mexico by its repressive Marxist government. It described the current political and social inequities suffered by both its Mexican citizens and foreign companies trading there and also provided a powerful account of the history of Catholic persecution in the country. Its narratives offered an implicit but potent warning about the barbarity of totalitarian regimes as war in Western Europe grew increasingly likely.




Robbery Under Law (12)


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In Robbery Under Law, subtitled 'The Mexican Object Lesson', Waugh presents a profoundly unpeaceful Mexican situation as a cautionary tale in which a once great civilisation - greater than the United States at the turn of the twentieth century - has succumbed, within the space of a single generation, to barbarism.




Waugh Abroad


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(Book Jacket Status: Jacketed) Thirty years’ worth of Evelyn Waugh’s inimitable travel writings have been gathered together for the first time in one volume. Waugh’s accounts of his travels–spanning the years from 1929 to 1958–describe journeys through the West Indies, Mexico, South America, the Holy Land, and Africa. And just as his travels informed his fiction, his novelist’s sensibility is apparent in each of these pieces. Waugh pioneered the genre of modern travel writing in which the comic predicament of the traveler is as central as the world he encounters. He wrote with as sharp an eye for folly as for foliage, and a delight in the absurd, not least where his own comfort and dignity are concerned. From his fresh take on the well-traveled and hence already “fully labeled” Mediterranean region in Labels, to a close-up view of Haile Selassie’s coronation in Remote People, from a comically miserable stint in British Guiana.




Robbery Under Law


Book Description




Decline and Fall


Book Description

Paul Pennyfeather is a second-year theology student who, as a result of mistaken identity, has his “education discontinued for personal reasons.” He ends up as a schoolmaster at a fourth-rate school, hired despite not meeting any of the qualifications in their advertisement. He there encounters a cornucopia of eccentric characters, including another master who has a wooden leg, a former clergyman with capital-D Doubts, and a servant who tells everyone he’s rich, but with a different tale for each about why he’s posing as a servant. Paul’s time at school leads to romance with a student’s mother, and that in turn leads to enormous complications in Paul’s life. Inspired in part by his own experiences in school and as a schoolmaster, Evelyn Waugh’s first published novel, Decline and Fall, is a dark and occasionally farcical satire of British college life. It’s something of a perverse coming-of-age story, subverting the expected journey and ending that the archetype usually demands. Shining a devastating light on many of the societal struggles of post-WWI Britain, Waugh took his novel’s title from another work that revealed the ineluctable descent of a great society: Gibbons’ The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Waugh issued a new edition of Decline and Fall in 1960 that contained restored text that was removed by his publisher from the first edition. This Standard Ebooks edition follows the first edition. This book is part of the Standard Ebooks project, which produces free public domain ebooks.







Works by Evelyn Waugh


Book Description

Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Commentary (works not included). Pages: 18. Chapters: Books by Evelyn Waugh, Evelyn Waugh characters, Novels by Evelyn Waugh, Brideshead Revisited, Sword of Honour, Scoop, Decline and Fall, Vile Bodies, A Handful of Dust, Lord Sebastian Flyte, Anthony Blanche, The Loved One, Helena, Love Among the Ruins. A Romance of the Near Future, The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold, William Boot, Black Mischief, Robbery Under Law, Put Out More Flags, A Little Learning, Aloysius. Excerpt: 1st edition cover (Chapman & Hall )A Little Learning: The First Volume of an Autobiography (1964) is Evelyn Waugh 's unfinished auto-biography and memoir. It was published just two years before his death on Easter Sunday, 1966. It covers the period of the author's youth and education . The title is a well-known quotation from Pope's An Essay on Criticism, "A little learning is a dang'rous thing."In this unfinished work Waugh passes this observation of post-war society in Oxford: "It seems that now, after the second war, my contemporaries are regarded with a mixture of envy and reprobation, as libertines and wastrels." Footnotes (URLs online) References (URLs online) A hyperlinked version of this chapter is at Robbery Under Law (1939) is a classic polemic travel book written by the British writer Evelyn Waugh.Plot The book states Mexico was a wasteland. But there are many points of interest in the Mexican story. Waugh educates the reader on Maximillian, which Waugh says was just an incident, an incident. The Pancho Villa incident, which Woodrow Wilson says he wanted Pancho Villa dead or alive. In each case, says Waugh, Mexico falls deeper into communism. By the time Waugh visits Mexico all history has been washed away. Waugh's thesis was why, after years of oil drilling, did the Mexican government nationalize all foreign owned oil companies within its borders. Europe...







Waugh Without End


Book Description

Compiled on the occasion of Evelyn Waugh's centenary in 2003, this collection of essays shows a renewed critical interest in the author extended by scholars from both sides of the Atlantic. The contributions go back to an international symposium held at La Rioja University, 15-17 May 2003. Apart from traditional debate over questions of fact and interpretation, the book contains innovative approaches to Waugh's oeuvre, some of which make use of theories of discourse and media studies and denote an increasingly sophisticated awareness of his religious, political, and social contexts. Beginning with those essays presenting overviews of Waugh's life and work, and continuing with discussions of particular books in chronological order, this volume deals with a wide variety of aspects that confirm Waugh's rising status as a major twentieth-century classic.