CONTEXT
STRUCTURE
FORM
CHARACTERISATION
LANGUAGE/STYLE
100

What was Brenda's betrayal inspired by?

Waugh's own failed marriage/divorce

100

Which setting represents superficial modern culture in the novel’s structure?

London

100

What literary form does A Handful of Dust mainly belong to, which uses humour to criticise upper-class society?

Satire

100

Which character represents the shallow glamour and performative behaviour of London high society?

Jenny Abdul Akbar

100

How would you describe the emotional tone of Waugh’s narrative style?

Detached and controlled.

200

Waugh converted to this religion in 1930, shaping the novel’s concern with morality and spiritual emptiness

Roman Catholicism

200

What do these separate settings (Hetton Abbey, Amazon jungle) represent?

Hetton Abbey: illusion of tradition

Amazon jungle: collapse of civilisation


200

What type of society does the novel satirise?

British upper class social world

200

Which character’s controlling personality is revealed through her frequent use of the modal verb “must”?

Brenda Last

200

What is this stylistic technique: Tony remains unaware of Brenda’s affair long after the reader recognises it.

Dramatic irony

300

Waugh believed modern society lacked these two foundations, leading to moral collapse.

religion and traditional values

300

Which event acts as the major structural turning point of the novel? (from light social satire into darker tragedy)

The death of John Andrew

300

Which literary tradition influences the novel through Tony being described as a “doomed hero” and through the architecture of Hetton Abbey?

The gothic tradition

300

This young relative later lives at Hetton and symbolizes the continuation of the Last family line.

Teddy

300

What is this literary device: e.g. Tony seeking adventure but end up becoming a prisoner?

Situational irony

400

Who were the Bright Young Things?

This group of wealthy, scandal-loving young socialites dominated London society in the 1920s.

400

How does the novel’s ending create structural irony?

England believes Tony died heroically, but he is actually alive and trapped reading Dickens.

400

Which literary movement influenced the novel’s pessimistic view of civilisation?

Modernism

400

He embodies the ruthless financial pragmatism of modern aristocracy by treating Tony’s marriage breakdown as a financial negotiation?

Reggie St. Cloud

400

How does Waugh use satirical language and irony to criticise modern British society in the novel?

He uses witty dialogue, polite but cruel language, and ironic descriptions to reveal hypocrisy, selfishness, and the moral emptiness of the upper classes.

500

What is Victorian morality?

Tony’s punishment reflects the collapse of this nineteenth-century system of moral values.

500

What structural idea is emphasised by society believing a false story about Tony’s fate?

Society moves on without recognising truth.

500

Why do critics describe the novel as a transitional work in Waugh’s career?

Because it combines comedy with darker tragic elements.

500

This local priest represents the fading moral authority of traditional English religion.

Mr. Tendril

500

Why does Waugh describe shocking events such as John Andrew’s death in an unemotional way?

To make the event more disturbing and highlight the emotional emptiness of the characters.