← Back to Concept Index

artistic-isolation

Mr Strange compares Norrell's magical burden to the loneliness of being the sole great artist in Europe, emphasizing the pressures of singular talent.

1 chapter across 1 book

Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell (2004)Susanna Clarke

1814. It seems that, in spite of many provocations, Strange was still struggling to bear patiently with the older magician

This chapter depicts the tense dynamic between Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell during a portrait sitting, highlighting Norrell's suspicious and restless behavior driven by his fear that the artist, Mr Lawrence, is copying spells from his books. It also includes a scholarly debate about the true identity of Francis Pevensey, a sixteenth-century magician, and whether a woman could have been a practitioner of magic, reflecting differing attitudes toward gender and magical tradition between Norrell and Strange.