Autorenbild.

Iris Murdoch (1919–1999)

Autor von Das Meer, das Meer

85+ Werke 26,267 Mitglieder 566 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 137 Lesern

Über den Autor

Iris Murdoch was one of the twentieth century's most prominent novelists, winner of the Booker Prize for The Sea. She died in 1999. (Publisher Provided) Iris Murdoch was born in Dublin, Ireland on July 15, 1919. She was educated at Badminton School in Bristol and Oxford University, where she read mehr anzeigen classics, ancient history, and philosophy. After several government jobs, she returned to academic life, studying philosophy at Newnham College, Cambridge. In 1948, she became a fellow and tutor at St. Anne's College, Oxford. She also taught at the Royal College of Art in London. A professional philosopher, she began writing novels as a hobby, but quickly established herself as a genuine literary talent. She wrote over 25 novels during her lifetime including Under the Net, A Severed Head, The Unicorn, and Of the Nice and the Good. She won several awards including the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for The Black Prince in 1973 and the Booker Prize for The Sea, The Sea in 1978. She died on February 8, 1999 at the age of 79. (Bowker Author Biography) weniger anzeigen
Bildnachweis: © Steve Pyke 1990 (use of image requires permission from Steve Pyke)

Werke von Iris Murdoch

Das Meer, das Meer (1978) 3,586 Exemplare
Unter dem Netz (1954) 2,143 Exemplare
Die Wasser der Sünde (1958) 2,040 Exemplare
Maskenspiel (1961) 1,542 Exemplare
Der schwarze Prinz (1973) 1,503 Exemplare
The Unicorn (1963) 943 Exemplare
Lauter feine Leute (1968) 904 Exemplare
A Fairly Honourable Defeat (1970) 825 Exemplare
The Green Knight (1993) 813 Exemplare
The Book and the Brotherhood (1987) 729 Exemplare
In guter Absicht (1985) 713 Exemplare
Die Sandburg (1957) 698 Exemplare
The Philosopher's Pupil (1983) 648 Exemplare
Das italienische Mädchen (1964) 635 Exemplare
A Word Child (1975) 633 Exemplare
Uhrwerk der Liebe (1974) 587 Exemplare
The Sovereignty of Good (1970) 542 Exemplare
The Red and the Green (1965) 540 Exemplare
Nuns and Soldiers (1980) 533 Exemplare
Bruno's Dream (1969) 525 Exemplare
Die Flucht vor dem Zauberer (1956) 512 Exemplare
An Unofficial Rose (1962) 492 Exemplare
The Message to the Planet (1989) 487 Exemplare
Henry und Cato. (1976) 476 Exemplare
Jackson's Dilemma (1995) 469 Exemplare
Ein Mann unter vielen (1971) 468 Exemplare
The Time of the Angels (1966) 383 Exemplare
Sartre: Romantic Rationalist (1953) 237 Exemplare
Something Special: A Story (1957) 161 Exemplare
Acastos: Two Platonic Dialogues (1986) 144 Exemplare
A year of birds : poems (1978) 8 Exemplare
O Sino 4 Exemplare
Die Souveränität des Guten (2023) 3 Exemplare
Unicórnio 1 Exemplar
Henry e Cato 1 Exemplar
İTALYAN KIZI 1 Exemplar
Hver tar sin 1 Exemplar
The Nature of Metaphysics (1960) 1 Exemplar
Çan 1 Exemplar
Against Dryness 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

The Penguin Book of Irish Fiction (1999) — Mitwirkender — 152 Exemplare
Virtue Ethics (1997) — Mitwirkender — 131 Exemplare
Granta 111: Going Back (2010) — Mitwirkender — 113 Exemplare
Iris Murdoch, Philosopher (2011) — Mitwirkender — 12 Exemplare
Plato on Art and Beauty (Philosophers in Depth) (2012) — Mitwirkender — 4 Exemplare
Plays of the Sixties, Volume 2 (1967) — Mitwirkender — 3 Exemplare
O'r pedwar gwynt, Gaeaf 2019 (2019) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar

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Wissenswertes

Rechtmäßiger Name
Murdoch, Jean Iris
Andere Namen
Murdoch, Jean Iris
Geburtstag
1919-07-15
Todestag
1999-02-08
Begräbnisort
Ashes scattered in the garden of Oxford Crematorium
Geschlecht
female
Nationalität
Ierland
Geburtsort
Dublin, Ireland
Sterbeort
Oxfordshire, England, UK
Todesursache
Alzheimer's disease
Wohnorte
Dublin, Ierland
Oxford, Engeland
Ausbildung
Somerville College, Oxford
Berufe
novelist
philosopher
Beziehungen
Bayley, John (Ehemann)
Organisationen
American Academy of Arts and Letters (Foreign Honorary, Literature | 1975)
American Academy of Arts and Sciences (Foreign Honorary Member | 1982)
St Anne's College, Oxford University
Preise und Auszeichnungen
Booker Prize (1978)
Agent
Ed Victor
Kurzbiographie
Iris Murdoch was born in Dublin, Ireland, the only child of an Anglo-Irish family. When she was a baby, the family moved to London, where her father worked as a civil servant. She attended the Badminton School as a boarder from 1932 to 1938. In 1938, she enrolled at Oxford University, where she read Classics. She graduated with a First Class Honors degree in 1942 and got a job with the Treasury. In 1944, she joined the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA), working in Brussels, Innsbruck, and Graz for two years. She then returned to her studies and became a postgraduate at Cambridge University. In 1948, she became a fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford, where she taught philosophy until 1963. In 1956, she married John Bayley, a literary critic, novelist, and English professor at Oxford. She published her debut novel, Under the Net, in 1954 and went on to produce 25 more novels and additional acclaimed works of philosophy, poetry and drama. She was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1982, and named a Dame Commander of Order of the British Empire in 1987. She was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 1997 and died two years later.

Mitglieder

Diskussionen

Group Read, June 2022: The Sea, the Sea in 1001 Books to read before you die (Juli 2022)
Group Read, July 2018: Under The Net in 1001 Books to read before you die (Juli 2018)
The Bell in Iris Murdoch readers (Februar 2018)
Musing on Murdoch in General in Iris Murdoch readers (Oktober 2017)
The Nice and the Good in Iris Murdoch readers (Februar 2017)
The Italian Girl in Iris Murdoch readers (November 2015)
The Sea, the Sea in Iris Murdoch readers (September 2015)
The Sandcastle in Iris Murdoch readers (Januar 2015)
The Green Knight in Iris Murdoch readers (Mai 2014)
The Unicorn in Iris Murdoch readers (Februar 2014)
***Group Read, October 2013: The Bell by Iris Murdoch in 1001 Books to read before you die (Oktober 2013)
The Book and the Brotherhood in Iris Murdoch readers (Oktober 2013)
A Severed Head in Iris Murdoch readers (Mai 2013)
The Black Prince in Iris Murdoch readers (Mai 2013)
The Philosopher's Pupil in Iris Murdoch readers (April 2013)
The Good Apprentice in Iris Murdoch readers (März 2013)
Something Special in Iris Murdoch readers (März 2013)
Henry and Cato in Iris Murdoch readers (Februar 2013)
A Word Child in Iris Murdoch readers (Februar 2013)
Bruno's Dream in Iris Murdoch readers (Februar 2013)
An Unofficial Rose in Iris Murdoch readers (Februar 2013)
Henry Cato in Iris Murdoch readers (Januar 2013)
Murdoch & Mayhem in 75 Books Challenge for 2012 (Dezember 2012)

Rezensionen

Charles Arrowby, retired playwright, actor and director, purchases a lonesome home on the English seacoast. There he begins a diary in which he reflects back upon his life and the people he has known. Abruptly the novel then becomes like a bizarre episode of "This Is Your Life" as several of these people show up on his doorstep. Charles Arrowby handles himself with perfect aplomb, until the most unexpected person of all appears.

I can nearly relate to Charles' age, and certainly to his love for solitude. I hope I can't relate to his self-centeredness and insensitivity, his quick judgements that dismiss others as more shallow than himself. Other than his father there is no one he has revered, except for one woman - the one person he will only mention in passing and not write about at all. It is she who appears at last. If you can recall a moment of love in your life that went left instead of going right, this novel is largely stemming that moment. When an opportunity comes that feels like a second chance, what then? Strange things begin to happen in and around Charles' home. A sea monster surfaces on the ocean. Decorations tumble and self-destruct. A face appears in a window and then is gone. And Charles gets his second chance.

Charles is not a nice man. His explanations for his renewed obsession are more like rationalizations, and there's a clear hypocricy in his reasoning. So long as it is others who are feeling driven to approach him and he who wants nothing to do with them, his responses are merely loathsome and unvarnished. When the shoe is on the other foot, he expects to be granted his desire and becomes a threatening figure. Lizzie and Rosina are fascinating externalizations of his own emerging issues: his blind indulgence in love, his jealous anger and irrationalism.

Memories and dreams are his primary drivers - like the sea, a wide placid surface into which he dives and swims, a sea that lets him go only reluctantly, often threatening to drown him, sometimes surprising with what rises to the surface. Mortality and rejection conspire to confront him with his egotism, but he is not remorseful even when he comes closest to penetrating his own illusions: "We must live by the light of our own self-satisfaction, through that secret vital busy inwardness which is even more remarkable than our reason." What doesn't accord can be shied away from, and there are always other illusions to be had.
… (mehr)
 
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Cecrow | 94 weitere Rezensionen | May 22, 2024 |
Reason read: botm April 2024, Reading 1001

This is the first published novel of Iris Murdoch and the sixth novel that I've read by the author. I enjoy her writing and this one is probably one of the easier books to read. It explores existential themes and identity. Jake is a lazy, contemplative, hack writer who lives off others. He goes from Madge to Anna to Sadie to Hugo to Mrs. Tinckham. It's also a picaresque novel with an exploration of London and a short trip to Paris. Our protagonist does grow, he finds that his love of Anna is unrequited, his idolization of Hugo is misplaced, that Sadie loves him, that he wants to own Mr. Mars and the cat finally mated with the Siamese. Jake decides he is going to not translate anymore and focus on his writing and he will work part time.… (mehr)
 
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Kristelh | 51 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 30, 2024 |
One of the queerest, most manic, most wonderful books I have read in a long time.

Iris Murdoch's debut novel is a disconcerting, shabby picaresque novel following the young hack writer Jake Donahue through a series of adventures. For the most part, it falls into my particular favourite type of picaresque: the adventure novel largely set over a few days. Murdoch is already comfortably inhabiting the body of a downtrodden, almost-broken, deeply strange protagonist, whose voice we can never entirely trust (Jake is keen to narrate his own story - a little too keen), and whose world seems to be a series of set-pieces that emerge out of otherwise ordinary life.

What is the plot? This is the kind of novel where certain literary snobs would say "the plot doesn't matter" but, reader, do not listen to them. In this case, the plot is precisely point. In a nutshell: Jake is kicked out by a woman, goes fawning back to two actress sisters from his past, uncovers a potential conspiracy involving a screenplay secretly adapted from a translation of a French novel he wrote some time ago, goes on a mad pub crawl with his gadabout mates, steals a film star dog who subsequently saves him from a police raid in the aftermath of a socialist party riot amidst an Ancient Roman film set in the middle of London, is mistaken for an escaped mental patient by an alley full of suburban gossips, pursues his lady love through Paris on Bastille Day, takes an unexpected job as a hospital orderly where his doubts and concerns come back to haunt him during a daring midnight visit to an incapacitated friend, and must consider whether he will position himself high(brow) or low on the unsteady rope ladder that is a literary career - or whether he even has the chops to climb the ladder at all. Throw in some Plato and a dash of Wittgenstein, a starling invasion straight out of Hitchcock's The Birds, and an avant-garde mime theatre, and you have Under the Net.

Murdoch's novel, first published in 1957, seems to sit quite comfortably within the (poorly named) 'Angry Young Man' cultural epoch - although Jake is not so much a victim of society as a personal exploration of those who exist comfortably in the margins. He has never held a job aside from writing until he signs up as an orderly, and is impressed by how easily he gets this one given how much his friends complain about the process. ("You will point out, and quite rightly", Jake says in one of Murdoch's moments of wry hilarity, that hospital orderly is perhaps a job where supply eclipses demand, "whereas what my friends were finding it so difficult to become was higher civil servants, columnists of the London dailies, officials of the British Council, fellows of colleges, or governors of the BBC. That is true.") Whereas her fellow novelists were interested in the temporal, Murdoch constantly allows us to see the metaphysical moments, the sublime and the ridiculous. But she is not writing, contrary to the philosophers who want to claim this text as their own, about what lies beyond the plot; Murdoch is finding the sublime within what is taking place, within human interaction and yearning.

And there is so much yearning. Although we have reason to doubt some of Jake's suspicions very early, he is a man easily compelled to new feeling: sudden love, sudden self-doubt, convinced he has destroyed a friendship or is under attack from the slightest of impulses. He is a fascinating character and, while I might concede that I'm not sure Murdoch entirely captures what it is like to be a male, the fulcrum around which her fairytale-like world rotates. (On a more terrestrial note, how times have changed - Jake tells us on the first page that his friend-cum-assistant Finn usually waits for him in bed, and later spends much of the book deeply pining for an old friend named Hugo. I had to separate myself entirely from 2020 to see these as the perfectly normal actions of a sensitive and impoverished heterosexual man!)

It is clear that one of my great projects for the 2020s will be to read all twenty-six of Murdoch's novels in order. I listened to the audiobook narrated by the pitch-perfect Samuel West, and I heartily recommend it for the way that West teases out both the uproarious comedy and the more delicate variety, yet I found myself returning to my copy of the book often to reread paragraphs or phrases just to let the author wash over me. I suspect that, structurally, or literarily, Under the Net is not one of Murdoch's greatest novels. (As her debut, it hardly could be!) But clearly from the Top 100 lists it frequently appears on, the novel has a place in the heart of many writers, and is perhaps an easier access point to her oeuvre than most.

Such fun.
… (mehr)
 
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therebelprince | 51 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 21, 2024 |
Another Iris Murdoch book, with many of the usual themes - a curious collection of people fall in and out of love and get into some unlikely situations. There is a lot of hand-wringing about religion and loss of faith, as well as about an unexpected inheritance and the characters are on the whole quite an endearing bunch.
½
 
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AlisonSakai | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 21, 2024 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
85
Auch von
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Mitglieder
26,267
Beliebtheit
#799
Bewertung
½ 3.7
Rezensionen
566
ISBNs
692
Sprachen
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