Description
Perry Anderson’s Different Speeds, Same Furies is a sophisticated examination of how major literary figures have employed narrative tempo and form to shape meaning. Through careful analysis of Powell, Proust, and other canonical writers, Anderson investigates the relationship between the pace of narration and the emotional intensity of literary experience.
The collection brings together essays that demonstrate how seemingly disparate approaches to storytelling—from the measured, leisurely pace of Proust’s extended meditations to the varied rhythms of Powell’s social chronicles—ultimately grapple with similar artistic challenges. Anderson argues that understanding these different speeds is essential to appreciating how modernist and contemporary writers have transformed the novel form itself.
Essential reading for literary scholars and serious fiction enthusiasts, this work offers fresh perspectives on canonical texts while establishing new frameworks for analyzing narrative technique in twentieth-century literature.







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