Disillusionment of the American Dream in "The Razor's Edge" (W. Sommerset Maugham)
Title: Disillusionment of the American Dream in "The Razor's Edge" (W. Sommerset Maugham)
Category: /History/War & Conflicts
Details: Words: 798 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
Disillusionment of the American Dream in "The Razor's Edge" (W. Sommerset Maugham)
Category: /History/War & Conflicts
Details: Words: 798 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
Originally a novel, written by W. Sommerset Maugham, "The Razor's Edge" is the story of an American man named Larry, who undergoes a transformation as he witnesses the changes in the world and his own life. Larry experiences disillusionment due to World War I, seeks refuge in France to "find himself", and questions the morals of society. The Razor's Edge entails several of the main elements of modernism, and Maugham illustrates them by exposing the
showed first 75 words of 798 total
You are viewing only a small portion of the paper.
Please login or register to access the full copy.
Please login or register to access the full copy.
showed last 75 words of 798 total
crashes. Isabelle marrying Grey, Larry's friend, is also painfully ironic. Lastly, Larry's fiancée, Sophie, dies before they can get married. Irony is not always satirical, especially in this time frame of depression.
Modernist writers use the depression as inspiration (irony!) for the literature read all over the world today. Modernism is a break from tradition and a peek into the lives of the past through historical events and those who live them.