A Vision of Battlements explained

Italic Title:(see above) -->
A Vision of Battlements
Author:Anthony Burgess
Illustrator:Edward Pagram
Published:Sidgwick & Jackson

London, 1965

Pages:265
Oclc:559438259

A Vision of Battlements is a 1965 novel by Anthony Burgess based on his experiences during World War II in Gibraltar, where he was serving with the British army. It is Burgess's first novel:[1] while it was not published until 1965, Burgess wrote it in 1949. As he explained in his introduction to the novel, "I was empty of music but itching to create. So I wrote this novel ... to see if I could clear my head of the dead weight of Gibraltar."[2]

Plot

The story draws from Burgess's experience of being stationed in Gibraltar during the Second World War and satirises traditional notions of battle heroism by parodying the Aeneid. The antihero Richard Ennis takes the place of Aeneas.[3] [4]

The title, in addition to its Gibraltarian associations, contains a reference to the appearance of certain objects in the eye of one who suffers from astigmatism.

Notes and References

  1. Nichol. Donald. "Flagrant" versus "Fragrant" in Beaumont, Pope, Pound, and Burgess. Modern Philology. August 1989. 87. 1. 76–82. 10.1086/391749. 161775775.
  2. Book: Burgess, Anthony. A Vision of Battlements. 1965. Norton. 7–8.
  3. Burgess. Anthony. Charles T. Bunting. A "Studies in the Novel" Interview: An interview in New York with Anthony Burgess. Studies in the Novel. Winter 1973. 4. 4. 504–529.
  4. Ziolkowski. Theodore. The Fragmented Text: The Classics and Postwar European Literature. International Journal of the Classical Tradition. Spring 2000. 6. 4. 549–562. 10.1007/bf02907070. 161421955.