English, Department of

 

Department of English: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

First Advisor

Laura White

Committee Members

Stephen Ramsay, Guy Reynolds, Patrick Callahan

Date of this Version

4-2025

Document Type

Thesis

Citation

A thesis presented to the faculty of the Graduate College at the University of Nebraska in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Master of Arts

Major: English

Under the supervision of Professor Laura White

Lincoln, Nebraska, April 2025

Comments

Copyright 2025, Alec J. Miller. Used by permission

Abstract

Evelyn Waugh’s conversion to Catholicism in 1930 raised the question of how his writing would change. The satires he wrote before his conversion, Decline and Fall (1928) and Vile Bodies (1930), are hilarious but have no spiritual vision. Critics attacked his second novel after his conversion, A Handful of Dust (1934), for not being fitting for a Catholic writer to have made. Yet, Waugh makes a religious point in A Handful of Dust, exploring the wages of spiritual apathy without showing a path out. Later in Waugh’s career, he makes his finest attempt in the Sword of Honour trilogy (1952-1961) to show the possibility of transcendent activity in an immanent world. The world at war in the trilogy is even more broken than the interwar world of A Handful of Dust. Yet, Waugh shows the subtle instrumentalization of broken people and situations to transform spiritual apathy and boredom into change and conversion. The gracelessness of A Handful of Dust illumines the subtle grace in the Sword of Honour. I argue that the war trilogy is best read and understood not in isolation as Waugh’s magnum opus but in relationship with his other works.

Advisor: Laura White

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