Abstract

Economics and Fiction

Troy, William | October 5, 1932 issue

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Phyllis Bentley's "Inheritance," is perhaps the first clean-cut example of a novel based firmly on the effects on character of economic as distinguished from social class, it is of special importance at the present moment. The theme of "Inheritance," it may be said, is the development of a family in terms at the development of the Industrial Revolution. Bentley's novel is without the social vision implicit in so many recent works, its structure is built more consistently on an economic subject than that of any other novel in a great many years.

See Also:

INDUSTRIAL revolution; BOOKS & reading; AUTHORS; FAMILIES; INHERITANCE (Book); BENTLEY, Phyllis
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