Abstract
Money: a Suicide Note (1984) and London Fields (1989) are Amis’ most political novels, vituperative castigations of the materialistic attitudes promoted by Thatcherite capitalism. Unlike the formalistic experimentalism of some of his later work (notably Time’s Arrow [1991]) and the characteristic emotional detachment that appears elsewhere in his fiction, these are committed and angry novels. Amis derides the conspicuousness of the Thatcherite yuppie generation, the consumerism that shamelessly affirms its self-perpetuation whilst disavowing any broader social responsibility. A devotee of free market economics, Money’s John Self lives out a fantasy of capitalist exorbitance protected from the reflections of conscience by the seductive reassurance of money.1 He can know himself only through his possessions, his material and psychic parameters irreducibly entwined, their substance determined only by his affluence in comparison with others. Self is a grotesque parody of superfluous consumption, shorn of morality and self-restraint. But Amis’ political engagement, his insistence on the interdependencies and responsibilities that permeate even this attenuated cultural framework, point towards a broader remit of social satire. Despite their metafictional flourishes these novels belong to the tradition of the ‘condition-of-England’ novel, the tradition beginning with such novels as Benjamin Disraeli’s Sybil (1845) and Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South (1855).2
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For Further Reading
For a hard copy list of Martin Amis’ work up to 2001, see Contemporary Novelists, ed. David Madden et al., 7th edn (New York: St James Press, 2001). For a more up-to-date list on the internet, see the British Council website: <http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/>.
Diedrick, James, Understanding Martin Amis (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1995).
Kavanagh, Dennis, Thatcherism and British Politics: the End of Consensus? (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987).
Lane, Richard J., Rod Mengham and Philip Tew, eds, Contemporary British Fiction (Cambridge: Polity, 2003).
Taylor, D. J., A Vain Conceit: British Fiction in the 1980s (London: Bloomsbury, 1989).
Tredell, Nicolas, The Fiction of Martin Amis (Cambridge: Icon Books, 2000).
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© 2005 Daniel Lea
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Lea, D. (2005). One Nation, Oneself: Politics, Place and Identity in Martin Amis’ Fiction. In: Acheson, J., Ross, S.C.E. (eds) The Contemporary British Novel Since 1980. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-73717-8_7
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