£4.995
FREE Shipping

The Collector

The Collector

RRP: £9.99
Price: £4.995
£4.995 FREE Shipping

In stock

We accept the following payment methods

Description

Clegg is a collector of butterflies, an amateur entomologist, and his desire to collect and preserve both butterflies and Miranda is a central theme of the novel. He likes to observe objects from afar, dead and sanitized and without any complicating emotions. Several times Miranda remarks that her presence is becoming unwieldy because she keeps expressing her emotions and trying to escape. Miranda also hates the idea of collecting, whether the collection contains great artworks or simply Clegg's butterflies. However, The Collector is more than just a thriller. The author’s way of narrating the story gives the reader deep insights into the minds of the two characters. On a psychological level, the book presents Fowles’s mastery in conveying profound meanings to the words he uses. If we analyze the collector’s actions and thoughts, we realize that he has a psychotic mind. Before kidnapping Miranda, while he was thoroughly preparing the details of his future actions, he tries to convince himself that he is not mad, that all his dreams and the imaginary stories he makes up in his mind about Miranda being his wife, are something normal, as long as there is “nothing nasty” in them. Clegg's photo-taking turns aggressive when chloroforms Miranda, takes off her clothes, and photographs her in her underwear. Near the end of the novel, he wants to photograph her naked as insurance in case she tries to tell anyone that he kidnapped her. For Clegg, photographs are a safe way to view Miranda and "collect" her without having to deal with messiness of emotions, or with the dilemma of having an angry prisoner in his basement. To him, photographs are renderings in which none of life's beauty is lost, only its ugly confusion. To Miranda, it is precisely this confusion - anything "nasty," as she says - that makes people alive and that has been the impetus for all great art. Prison From 1968, Fowles lived in the small harbour town of Lyme Regis, Dorset. His interest in the town's local history resulted in his appointment as curator of the Lyme Regis Museum in 1979, a position he filled for a decade.

Readers at large better know John Fowles for two of his most acclaimed novels. The Magus, published in 1965, has generated the most lasting interest, becoming something of a cult novel, particularly in the United States of America. The most commercially successful, The French Lieutenant’s Woman, appeared in 1969 and won several awards and was made into a well-received film (1981) starring Meryl Streep in the title role. Miranda and Clegg have very different views regarding photographs, as becomes clear at several different points throughout the novel. Miranda thinks that photographs are dead, mere facsimiles of moments, and that such records fail to capture living, breathing reality. "When you draw something it lives and when you photograph it it dies," she says. To Clegg, however, photographs are a safe way of viewing the world. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the photographs he takes of Miranda. Clegg's photographs start off fairly innocuously: he simply asks Miranda if he can take pictures of her, and she consents. She thinks his photographs show no artistic talent, but she does not object.

While held captive, Miranda exerts every possible effort to achieve her escape. Her attempts reveal a cunning mind with a penchant for strategy and manipulation, seeing her captor’s inexperience with women and attempting to exploit his misplaced fondness for her to his advantage. Time passes, and her disdain for her captor turns to pity; she begins to understand his strange, idiosyncratic view of the world, but she cannot love him. She is too independent, too sure of what she wants from life to exist within the confines of the cellar. So yeah, I'm reading it and the story seems to end halfway through and I begin Miranda's diary and I begin to think, goddamn, I hav Tags: Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Analysis of John Fowles’s Novels, Bibliography of John Fowles’s Novels, Character Study of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Character Study of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Character Study of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Character Study of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Character Study of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Character Study of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Character Study of John Fowles’s Novels, Criticism of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Criticism of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Criticism of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Criticism of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Criticism of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Criticism of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Criticism of John Fowles’s Novels, Essays of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Essays of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Essays of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Essays of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Essays of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Essays of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Essays of John Fowles’s Novels, John Fowles, John Fowles’s Novels, Literary Criticism, Literary Theory, Notes of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Notes of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Notes of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Notes of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Notes of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Notes of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Notes of John Fowles’s Novels, Plot of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Plot of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Plot of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Plot of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Plot of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Plot of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Plot of John Fowles’s Novels, Simple Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Simple Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Simple Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Simple Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Simple Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Simple Analysis of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Simple Analysis of John Fowles’s Novels, Study Guides of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Study Guides of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Study Guides of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Study Guides of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Study Guides of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Study Guides of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Study Guides of John Fowles’s Novels, Summary of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Summary of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Summary of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Summary of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Summary of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Summary of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Summary of John Fowles’s Novels, Synopsis of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Synopsis of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Synopsis of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Synopsis of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Synopsis of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Synopsis of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Synopsis of John Fowles’s Novels, Themes of John Fowles’s Novel A Maggot, Themes of John Fowles’s Novel Daniel Martin, Themes of John Fowles’s Novel The Collector, Themes of John Fowles’s Novel The Ebony Tower, Themes of John Fowles’s Novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Themes of John Fowles’s Novel The Magus, Themes of John Fowles’s Novels Related Articles

Several teaching jobs followed: a year lecturing in English literature at the University of Poitiers, France; two years teaching English at Anargyrios College on the Greek island of Spetsai; and finally, between 1954 and 1963, teaching English at St. Godric's College in London, where he ultimately served as the department head. Awards Winners". Writers Guild of America. Archived from the original on 2012-12-05 . Retrieved 2010-06-06. There are lots of literary references – to The Tempest, of course, with Miranda referring to Clegg as her Caliban – and Emma, but also to more contemporary books about other anti-social characters like The Catcher in the Rye and Saturday Night and Sunday Morning. The discussions about art are thoughtful and engaging.

Select a format:

In the succeeding story, “The Enigma,” a mystery of a different kind is presented: the disappearance of John Marcus Fielding, member of Parliament, and the subsequent investigation by Sergeant Jennings. The first mystery focuses on the reason behind the disappearance of Fielding, whose body is never discovered and whose motive is never revealed. What is hinted at by Isobel Dodgson, the former girlfriend of Fielding’s son and the last person to have seen Fielding before he disappeared, is that Fielding absconded from life because it offered no mystery; thus he provided his own by disappearing. The most commercially successful of Fowles' novels, The French Lieutenant's Woman, appeared in 1969. It resembles a Victorian novel in structure and detail, while pushing the traditional boundaries of narrative in a very modern manner. Romanul impresioneaza foarte mult cititorul prin antiteza dintre protagonista si erou iar sfarsitul revoltator si crud il va infuria negresit pe acesta. Este incorecta si lipsita de sens atat soarta fluturilor cat si soarta frumoasei Miranda. Consider ca este un pacat capital sa prinzi cele mai frumoase exemplare in vreun insectar obscur, rapindu-le astfel lumii.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

Delivery & Returns

Fruugo

Address: UK
All products: Visit Fruugo Shop