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''The James Bond Dossier'' (1965), by
Kingsley Amis Sir Kingsley William Amis (16 April 1922 – 22 October 1995) was an English novelist, poet, critic, and teacher. He wrote more than 20 novels, six volumes of poetry, a memoir, short stories, radio and television scripts, and works of social and ...
, is a critical analysis of the James Bond novels. Amis dedicated the book to friend and background collaborator, the poet and historian
Robert Conquest George Robert Acworth Conquest (15 July 1917 – 3 August 2015) was a British historian and poet. A long-time research fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, Conquest was most notable for his work on the Soviet Union. His books ...
. Later, after Ian Fleming's death, Amis was commissioned as the first continuation novelist for the James Bond novel series, writing '' Colonel Sun'' (1968) under the pseudonym Robert Markham. ''The James Bond Dossier'' was the first, formal, literary study of the James Bond character. More recent studies of Fleming's secret agent and his world include ''The Politics of James Bond: From Fleming's Novels to the Big Screen'' (2001), by the historian Jeremy Black.


History

Written at the Bond-mania's zenith in the 1960s, ''The James Bond Dossier'' is the first, thorough, albeit tongue-in-cheek, literary analysis of Ian Fleming's strengths and weaknesses as a thriller-writer. As a mainstream novelist, Amis respected the Bond novels, especially their commercial success, believing them 'to be just as complex and to have just as much in them as more ambitious kinds of fiction'. That was a controversial approach in the 1960s, because from early on, since the mid-1950s, the James Bond novels were criticised by some detractors for their violence, male chauvinism, sexual promiscuity, racism, and
anti-Communism Anti-communism is Political movement, political and Ideology, ideological opposition to communism. Organized anti-communism developed after the 1917 October Revolution in the Russian Empire, and it reached global dimensions during the Cold War, w ...
. Despite his intellectual respect for the Fleming canon, Amis's way of writing about it, according to his biographer Zachary Leader, ' ... partly guys academic procedures and pretensions by applying them to low-cultural objects' and, as such, is deliberately provocative. In that context, the ''Dossier'' can ' ... look like a cheeky two-fingered salute to the academic world, a farewell raspberry blown at all things pedantically donnish, in a manner Lucky Jim would surely have approved. For to Ian Fleming's ''œuvre'' Amis brought the anatomising and categorising zeal he never had devoted and never would devote to more elevated works of literature'.Jacobs, Eric ''Kingsley Amis: A Biography''. St. Martin's Press, 1995, p. 269


From essay to book

Kingsley Amis had several motives for writing the ''Dossier''. He had recently retired from teaching and wanted to 'put behind him the more rigid austerities of university life'.Jacobs, Eric ''Kingsley Amis: A Biography''. St. Martin's Press, 1995, p. 267. He wanted to expand his range as a writer beyond poetry and mainstream fiction. The need to make more money was also a consideration. Primarily, however, he wanted to show the academics that the literature of popular culture could be as substantive as the literature of
high culture High culture is a subculture that emphasizes and encompasses the cultural objects of aesthetic value, which a society collectively esteem as exemplary art, and the intellectual works of philosophy, history, art, and literature that a society co ...
. In November 1963, he announced to Conquest the idea of writing an essay of some 5,000 words about the James Bond novels. By late 1964, he had expanded the essay to book length, and submitted it to his publisher,
Jonathan Cape Jonathan Cape is a London publishing firm founded in 1921 by Herbert Jonathan Cape, who was head of the firm until his death in 1960. Cape and his business partner Wren Howard set up the publishing house in 1921. They established a reputation ...
. In one hundred and sixty pages, ''The James Bond Dossier'' methodically catalogues and analyses the activities and minutiae of secret agent 007: the number of men he kills, the women he loves, the villains he thwarts, and the essential background of Ian Fleming's
Cold War The Cold War is a term commonly used to refer to a period of geopolitical tension between the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies, the Western Bloc and the Eastern Bloc. The term '' cold war'' is used because t ...
world of the 1950s.Jacobs, Eric ''Kingsley Amis: A Biography''. St. Martin's Press, 1995, p. 269. After Fleming's death in August 1964, Glidrose Productions Ltd., owners of the international book rights, asked for Amis's editorial assessment of the uncompleted manuscript of '' The Man with the Golden Gun'', which Jonathan Cape deemed feeble, and perhaps unpublishable. He reported that the manuscript was publishable, but would require substantial modifications. Because Amis was not the only writer consulted,Leader, Zachary ''The Life of Kingsley Amis''. Pantheon Books, 2007, p. 542 it remains controversial if his editorial suggestions were implemented, and to what extent Amis contributed directly to the revision of the manuscript. In the event, the ''Dossiers publication was delayed a year, because Jonathan Cape asked Amis to include discussion of ''The Man With the Golden Gun''. Both books were published in 1965; later that year, Amis reviewed ''The Man With the Golden Gun'' in the ''New Statesman''.


The Dossier

''The James Bond Dossier'' includes most of the Bond fiction cycle, excepting ''
Octopussy and The Living Daylights ''Octopussy and The Living Daylights'' (sometimes published as ''Octopussy'') is the 14th and final James Bond book written by Ian Fleming in the Bond series. The book is a collection of short stories published posthumously in the United Kin ...
'' (1966), the final collection of 007 short stories, which was published after the ''Dossier''. Kingsley Amis's argument is that the Bond novels are substantial and complex works of fiction, and certainly not, as Ian Fleming's critics said, 'a systematic onslaught on everything decent and sensible in modern life'. He viewed them as popular literature, akin to that of the science fiction texts he critiqued in ''New Maps of Hell'' (1960). Although written in Amis's usual accessible, light-hearted style, ''The James Bond Dossier'' is neither patronising nor ironic — it is a detailed literary criticism of the Ian Fleming canon. In the main, he admires Fleming's achievement, yet does not withhold criticism where the material proves unsatisfactory or inconsistent, especially when the narration slips into 'the idiom of the novelette'. Amis reserves his most serious criticism for what he considered to be academically pretentious rejections of the Bond books, a theme implicitly informing much of the ''Dossier''. Each of the 14 chapters deals with one aspect of the novels — 'No woman had ever held this man' defends Bond's attitude to and treatment of women: "Bond's habitual attitude to a girl is protective, not dominating or combative"; 'Damnably clear grey eyes' describes M., the head of SIS: "a peevish, priggish old monster"; 'A glint of red' is about the villains, who have in common only physical largeness and angry eyes; and so forth. According to his first biographer, Eric Jacobs, the hand of sovietologist and scholar Robert Conquest is betrayed in Amis's precise dissertation upon the genesis and changing nomenclatures of SMERSH, the employer of the villains of the early novels. Three appendices deal, respectively, with science fiction, literature and escape, and 'sadism'. With 'almost parodic scholarly dedication', Amis provides a ten-category ('Places', 'Girl', 'Villain's Project', etc.) reference guide (pp. 156–159) to the Bond novels and short stories. Typical of Amis's approach is where he suggests several implausibilities in Bond's capture by the eponymous villain in ''Dr No'' (1958). However, that 'Bond is temporarily helpless in his creator's grip', does not matter, because 'three of Mr Fleming's favourite situations are about to come up one after the other. Bond is to be wined and dined, lectured on the aesthetics of power, and finally tortured by his chief enemy'. Earlier, Amis had discussed the matter of Bond's correct designation: 'It's inaccurate, of course, to describe James Bond as a ''spy'', in the strict sense of one who steals or buys or smuggles the secrets of foreign powers ... Bond's claims to be considered a ''counter-spy'', one who operates against the agents of unfriendly powers, are rather more substantial'. Although, as noted elsewhere, Amis wrote three books related to the James Bond franchise, and may or may not have contributed to one of Fleming's novels, ''The James Bond Dossier'' would end up being the only book of this type to be published under Amis's own name.


Critical endeavours

In the 1968 essay 'A New James Bond', anthologised in ''What Became of Jane Austen? And Other Questions'' (1970), Kingsley Amis revisits the literary character, and explains why he accepted the commission of writing ''Colonel Sun'' (1968), discusses the challenge of impersonating the writer Ian Fleming, and explores the stylistic and world-view differences among the spy novels of
Ian Fleming Ian Lancaster Fleming (28 May 1908 – 12 August 1964) was a British writer who is best known for his postwar '' James Bond'' series of spy novels. Fleming came from a wealthy family connected to the merchant bank Robert Fleming & Co., ...
,
John le Carré David John Moore Cornwell (19 October 193112 December 2020), better known by his pen name John le Carré ( ), was a British and Irish author, best known for his espionage novels, many of which were successfully adapted for film or television. ...
, and Len Deighton.Amis, Kingsley ''What Became of Jane Austen? And Other Questions''. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., 1970; pp. 65–77 Moreover, under the pseudonym 'Lt.-Col. William "Bill" Tanner' — M.'s CoS and 007's best friend in SIS — Amis wrote his second Bond book, '' The Book of Bond, or Every Man His Own 007'' (1965), a tongue-in-cheek, how-to-manual to help every man find his own inner secret agent. Other studies of the James Bond phenomenon include: '' Double O Seven, James Bond, A Report'' (1964), by O. F. Snelling (revised, re-titled, and re-published on-line, in 2007, as ''Double-O Seven: James Bond Under the Microscope'' 006, an analysis of Bond's literary predecessors, his image, women, adversaries, and future; ''Ian Fleming: The Spy Who Came In with the Gold'' (1965), by Henry A. Zeiger, a biography of Fleming as a commercial writer; ''The Politics of James Bond: From Fleming's Novels to the Big Screen'' (2001), by historian Jeremy Black, an analysis of the cultural politics of the Bond books and films; ''James Bond and Philosophy: Questions Are Forever'' (2006), edited by James B. South and Jacob M. Held, a collection of essays which discuss ethical and moral issues arising out of the Bond stories; and Simon Winder's ''The Man Who Saved Britain: A Personal Journey into the Disturbing World of James Bond'' (2006), a discussion of how post–Second World War England is represented in the novels and films.


See also

*
Outline of James Bond The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to James Bond: James Bond is a fictional character created in 1953 by the journalist and writer Ian Fleming, who featured him in twelve novels and two short story collection ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:James Bond Dossier, The Non-fiction books about James Bond 1965 non-fiction books Books by Kingsley Amis Works about Ian Fleming Books of literary criticism