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Talking It Over by Julian Barnes

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Title: Talking It Over by Julian Barnes


1
Talking It OverbyJulian Barnes
  • Presented by Sherry Lu
  • 2004/05/06

2
Julian Barnes
3
Julian Barnes
  • 19 January 1946born in Leicester, England.
  • 1968receiving his BA degree in Magdalen College,
    Oxford.
  • 1966-67as an English teacher in a school in
    Rennes, France.
  • 1969-72the staff of the Oxford English
    Dictionary.
  • Reviewing books for the Times Literary
    Supplement, later becoming literary editor of the
    New Statesman.
  • 1979-86as a television critic, first for the New
    Statesmen and then for the Observer (London).

4
Works
  • Metroland (1980)
  • Before She Met Me (1982)
  • Flaubert's Parrot (1984)Staring at the Sun
    (1986)Metroland (1987)A History of the World in
    10 1/2 Chapters (1989)Talking It Over A Novel
    (1991)The Porcupine (1992)Letters from London
    1990-1995 (1995)Cross Channel (1996)England,
    England (1998)Love, Etc. (2000)Something to
    Declare Essays on France (2002)

5
 Talking it Over
  • A story of a love triangle
  • Stuart and Oliver are best friends
    Stuart marries Gillian Oliver falls in
    love with Gillian Oliver marries Gillian.

6
Narration (1)
  • Multiple Points of view
  • Unreliable narratives
  • Repetition
  • The characters address the reader directly.
  • Stuart, Oliver, and Gillian each tell their own
    story, with a few other voices also making
    themselves heard.

7
Narration (2)
  • Each offering a different point of view, a
    different spin, and, occasionally, an entirely
    different account of what happened.
  • They not only strive to seduce the reader's
    admiration but inquire nervously about what the
    others are saying, provide warnings against their
    deceptions, and so on.

8
Characters
  • Stuart a young banker, careful, a bit unsure of
    himself, without a university education.
  • Stuart rabbit imagery. (33)
  • Oliver a pedantic, unfulfilled soul, a wilder,
    artsy type who travelled, studied, and finally
    wound up as teaching at the tacky Shakespeare
    School of English.
  • Oliver dog imagery. (47, 79, 203,250)
  • Gillian trained in social work for while, but
    then became an art restorer.

9
A homosocial relationship (1)
  • In a patriarchal society the privileging of male
    homosocial relationships is naturalised.
  • Stuart and Oliver are schoolboy friends. Their
    initial exchange is overtly and consciously
    economic "Lend us a quid". (18) A pair
    who are overtly aware of and even discuss the
    economic foundation of their relationship.
  • We very occasionally went on double dates but
    they were without exception complete disasters.
    For a start, Oliver would always provide the
    girls and I would always provide the money" (52).
  • The 'girls' are referred to as somehow
    secondary to the men themselves.

10
A homosocial relationship (2)
  • A competition between them.
  • Stuart and Gillian Stuart has essentially taken
    Oliver's 'job' and found a girl for himself.
    Just like at school. Poor old Oliver. This
    time I simply wrote him a decent-sized cheque and
    told him not to worry about repaying it" (73).
  • Oliver's response to triangulate the
    relationship. He thus convinces himself that he
    is in love with Gillian, thereby justifying his
    willful insertion into Stuart and Gillian's
    personal life.

11
A homosocial relationship (3)
  • Olives and Gillian We live in an era of market
    forces, Stuart, and it would be naïve or, as they
    used to term it, romantic not to realise that
    market forces now apply in whole areas where
    hitherto they were deemed inapplicable (160).
  • Stuart He hasnt changed, Oliver. Land us a
    quid, give us your wife. Hes basically a
    parasite, do you see? A work-shy snob and a
    parasite (163).

12
Female role (1)
  • Women as purely sexual objects and never as
    equals.
  • Stuart and Oliver really view Gillian
    as the object of negotiation.
  • Gillian initially rejects her opportunity to
    speak. She tells the reader "I'm an ordinary,
    private person. I haven't got anything to say"
    (9-10).
  • Later feels a need to defend her
    opinions and actions.
  • Gillian and Oliver Oliver "needed someone like
    Stuart around. It's the same as colour theory.
    When you put two colours side by side, that
    affects the way you see each of them" (258).

13
Female role (2)
  • Gillian has been reduced to viewing and placing
    herself as subordinate to the needs and interests
    of both Stuart and Oliver (242).
  • Gillian Love, respect, fancy. I thought Id got
    all three with Stuart. I thought I got all three
    with Oliver. But maybe threes not possible.
    Maybe the best you can get is two, and the HOLD
    button is always on the blink (255).

14
Truth? Lies?
  • The conflicting stories
  • seem to suggest that there is no real truth,
    only conflicting stories, but it is possible to
    discover the facts, though how they should be
    judged is another matter.

15
Reference
  • http//www.julianbarnes.com/bib/tio.html
  • http//www.complete-review.com/reviews/barnesj/tio
    .htm
  • http//mural.uv.es/jahesa/notestalking.htm
  • http//www.julianbarnes.com/
  • http//www.english1.org.uk/barnes.htm
  • http//www.nybooks.com/authors/128
  • http//www.salon.com/weekly/interview960513.html
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