In the heyday of the campus novel you could afford farce, explains A.S. Byatt, because universities were intensely hopeful, whereas now they’re terrified and cowering and underfinanced and overexamined and overbureaucratised (qtd. in Edemariam 34).
Maggie Berg
In the heyday of the campus novel you could afford farce, explains A.S. Byatt, because universities were intensely hopeful, whereas now they’re terrified and cowering and underfinanced and overexamined and overbureaucratised (qtd. in Edemariam 34).