![]() ![]() Were Florence and Edward incompatible in ways beyond sexual ones? What do their difficulties in bed say about their relationship altogether? Or is sex an isolated aspect of a marriage?Ħ. At what point did Edward and Florence’s solemnity become viewed as old–fashioned? What contributed to that shift? What are your recollections, or those shared by relatives who lived it, of the emerging youth culture of the late 1960s and ’70s?ĥ. We are also told that Edward was born in 1940, while his parents contemplated possible outcomes of the war with Germany. Ian McEwan describes the novel’s time period as an era when youth was not glorified but adulthood was. ![]() What might have been the intention in including that line when this version of the marriage ceremony was written? How does it make Edward feel?Ĥ. Edward replays the words “with my body I thee worship” in his mind. Is Edward’s libido truly the primary reason he proposes marriage, or were other factors involved (perhaps ones he did not even admit to himself)? Are relationships harmed or helped by cultural restrictions against sex before marriage? Would this marriage have taken place if the couple had met when birth–control pills were no longer just a rumor?ģ. What do the novel’s opening lines tell us about Edward and Florence? How did your perceptions of them change throughout the subsequent pages? What details did you eventually know about them that they never fully revealed to one another?Ģ. ![]()
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