Frank Kermode

Frank Kermode’s Followers (91)

member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo

Frank Kermode


Born
in Douglas, Isle of Man
November 29, 1919

Died
August 17, 2010

Genre


Sir John Frank Kermode was a highly regarded British literary critic best known for his seminal critical work The Sense of an Ending: Studies in the Theory of Fiction, published in 1967 (revised 2003).

Average rating: 4.06 · 10,861 ratings · 1,071 reviews · 184 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Sense of an Ending: Stu...

3.92 avg rating — 796 ratings — published 1967 — 23 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Shakespeare's Language

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 431 ratings — published 2000 — 16 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Age of Shakespeare

3.67 avg rating — 266 ratings — published 2004 — 17 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Genesis of Secrecy: On ...

4.13 avg rating — 103 ratings — published 1979 — 9 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Romantic Image

3.86 avg rating — 50 ratings — published 1957 — 34 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Oxford Anthology of Eng...

by
4.25 avg rating — 44 ratings — published 1973 — 4 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Oxford Anthology of Eng...

4.44 avg rating — 32 ratings — published 1973
Rate this book
Clear rating
Concerning E.M. Forster

3.64 avg rating — 39 ratings — published 2009 — 18 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Not Entitled: A Memoir

3.71 avg rating — 35 ratings — published 1995 — 9 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Oxford Book of Letters

by
3.61 avg rating — 31 ratings — published 1995 — 11 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
More books by Frank Kermode…
Quotes by Frank Kermode  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“It is ourselves we encounter whenever we invent fictions.”
Frank Kermode, The Sense of an Ending: Studies in the Theory of Fiction

“You sometimes hear people say, with a certain pride in their clerical resistance to the myth, that the nineteenth century really ended not in 1900 but in 1914. But there are different ways of measuring an epoch. 1914 has obvious qualifications; but if you wanted to defend the neater, more mythical date, you could do very well. In 1900 Nietzsche died; Freud published The Interpretation of Dreams; 1900 was the date of Husserl Logic, and of Russell's Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz. With an exquisite sense of timing Planck published his quantum hypothesis in the very last days of the century, December 1900. Thus, within a few months, were published works which transformed or transvalued spirituality, the relation of language to knowing, and the very locus of human uncertainty, henceforth to be thought of not as an imperfection of the human apparatus but part of the nature of things, a condition of what we may know. 1900, like 1400 and 1600 and 1000, has the look of a year that ends a saeculum. The mood of fin de siècle is confronted by a harsh historical finis saeculi. There is something satisfying about it, some confirmation of the rightness of the patterns we impose. But as Focillon observed, the anxiety reflected by the fin de siècle is perpetual, and people don't wait for centuries to end before they express it. Any date can be justified on some calculation or other.

And of course we have it now, the sense of an ending. It has not diminished, and is as endemic to what we call modernism as apocalyptic utopianism is to political revolution. When we live in the mood of end-dominated crisis, certain now-familiar patterns of assumption become evident. Yeats will help me to illustrate them.

For Yeats, an age would end in 1927; the year passed without apocalypse, as end-years do; but this is hardly material. 'When I was writing A Vision,' he said, 'I had constantly the word "terror" impressed upon me, and once the old Stoic prophecy of earthquake, fire and flood at the end of an age, but this I did not take literally.' Yeats is certainly an apocalyptic poet, but he does not take it literally, and this, I think, is characteristic of the attitude not only of modern poets but of the modern literary public to the apocalyptic elements. All the same, like us, he believed them in some fashion, and associated apocalypse with war. At the turning point of time he filled his poems with images of decadence, and praised war because he saw in it, ignorantly we may think, the means of renewal. 'The danger is that there will be no war.... Love war because of its horror, that belief may be changed, civilization renewed.' He saw his time as a time of transition, the last moment before a new annunciation, a new gyre. There was horror to come: 'thunder of feet, tumult of images.' But out of a desolate reality would come renewal. In short, we can find in Yeats all the elements of the apocalyptic paradigm that concern us.”
Frank Kermode, The Sense of an Ending: Studies in the Theory of Fiction

“Tick is a humble genesis, tock a feeble apocalypse; and tick-tock is in any case not much of a plot. We need much larger ones and much more complicated ones if we persist in finding 'what will suffice.' And what happens if the organization is much more complex than tick-tock? Suppose, for instance, that it is a thousand-page novel. Then it obviously will not lie within what is called our 'temporal horizon'; to maintain the experience of organization we shall need many more fictional devices. And although they will essentially be of the same kind as calling the second of those two related sounds tock, they will obviously be more resourceful and elaborate. They have to defeat the tendency of the interval between tick and tock to empty itself; to maintain within that interval following tick a lively expectation of tock, and a sense that however remote tock may be, all that happens happens as if tock were certainly following. All such plotting presupposes and requires that an end will bestow upon the whole duration and meaning. To put it another way, the interval must be purged of simple chronicity, of the emptiness of tock-tick., humanly uninteresting successiveness. It is required to be a significant season, kairos poised between beginning and end. It has to be, on a scale much greater than that which concerns the psychologists, an instance of what they call 'temporal integration'--our way of bundling together perception of the present, memory of the past, and expectation of the future, in a common organization. Within this organization that which was conceived of as simply successive becomes charged with past and future: what was chronos becomes kairos. This is the time of the novelist, a transformation of mere successiveness which has been likened, by writers as different as Forster and Musil, to the experience of love, the erotic consciousness which makes divinely satisfactory sense out of the commonplace person.”
Frank Kermode, The Sense of an Ending: Studies in the Theory of Fiction

Topics Mentioning This Author

topics posts views last activity  
The Book Challenge: Inna's 200 in 2010 67 765 Apr 09, 2010 05:52AM  
Goodreads Librari...: Publication date not appearing 3 22 Sep 24, 2015 03:47AM  
Goodreads Librari...: This topic has been closed to new comments. Please combine 1013 294 Apr 11, 2019 07:28AM  
Mount TBR 2019: Nullifidian's Trek Up Mt. Toro 3 12 Dec 03, 2019 05:09PM  
#ClassicsCommunit...: Classics Read in March 19 115 Apr 15, 2020 10:51AM  
Works of Thomas H...: An Imaginative Woman (from Wessex Tales) hosted by Jennifer 164 24 Sep 30, 2023 08:27AM  
The Life of a Boo...: A to Z Authors 3979 1139 Oct 13, 2025 10:39AM  
Never too Late to...: Title Game: Second Edition 7931 633 12 minutes ago