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Coming to The Day of the Jackal (1971) at this part of the course we re-visit the territory of the 'Masculine Romance', of The Thirty-Nine Steps and Rogue Male (particularly the latter novel to which Forsyth's novel seems to be particularly indebted. As with the earlier novels The Day of the Jackal is a pursuit thriller, bringing in elements of the political thriller, and with common preoccupation's: conspiracies and threats to social order; the testing of "masculine values" of competition, endurance, the ability to know one's way around the "Great Gymnasium" of the "Real World", instinct, bravery, rationalism, etc. I have chosen to study the novel at this point because it illustrates the extent to which the form has proved remarkably resilient: the character of Mike Martin, for example, the SAS hero who saves the world from the Iranian Super Gun in Forsyth's latest novel, The Fist of God, bears more th...

Posted by: Amy Hetzel

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