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Modernism, Daily Time and Everyday Life
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 157

Modernism, Daily Time and Everyday Life

Bryony Randall explores the twin concepts of daily time and of everyday life through the writing of several major modernist authors. The book begins with a contextualising chapter on the psychologists William James and Henri Bergson. It goes on to devote chapters to Dorothy Richardson, Gertrude Stein, H. D. and Virginia Woolf. These experimental writers, she argues, reveal everyday life and daily time as rich and strange, not simply a banal backdrop to more important events. Moreover, Randall argues that paying attention to the everyday and daily time can be politically empowering and subversive. The specific social and cultural context of the early twentieth century is one in which the concept of daily time is particularly strongly challenged. By examining Modernism's engagement with or manifestation of this notion of daily time, she reveals a totally new perspective on their concerns and complexities.

Virginia Woolf in Context
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 521

Virginia Woolf in Context

Covering a wide range of historical, theoretical, critical and cultural contexts, this collection studies key issues in contemporary Woolf studies.

Modernist Party
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 235

Modernist Party

Have you ever been struck by the number of parties in Modernist literature? In The Modernist Party, internationally distinguished scholars explore the party both as a literary device and as a social setting in which the movement's creative values were dev

Ireland, Revolution, and the English Modernist Imagination
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 241

Ireland, Revolution, and the English Modernist Imagination

This book asks how English authors of the early to mid twentieth-century responded to the nationalist revolution in neighbouring Ireland in their work, and explores this response as an expression of anxieties about, and aspirations within, England itself. Drawing predominantly on novels ofthis period, but also on letters, travelogues, literary criticism, and memoir, it illustrates how Irish affairs provided a marginal but pervasive point of reference for a wide range of canonical authors in England, including Wyndham Lewis, Virginia Woolf, D.H. Lawrence, Graham Greene, and EvelynWaugh, and also for many lesser-known figures such as Ethel Mannin, George Thomson, and T.H. White.The book survey...

Ecocriticism in the Modernist Imagination
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 253

Ecocriticism in the Modernist Imagination

Sultzbach's book provides a wide-ranging investigation into how the works of Forster, Woolf, and Auden helped shape our environmental imagination.

Modernist Short Fiction and Things
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 227

Modernist Short Fiction and Things

This book reappraises the philosophical value of short fiction by Virginia Woolf, Katherine Mansfield and Elizabeth Bowen, examining the stories through the lens of specific everyday objects. Looking at Woolf and armchairs, Mansfield and snack food, and Bowen and fashion accessories, it probes the aesthetic resonance between these stories’ form and contents and also considers the modes of thinking they might promote. Conceiving of their short fiction as intrinsically radical and experimental even within a wider context of modernist innovation, this book shows how these important women writers brought quotidian objects to riotous life, in such a way that tasked readers with reevaluating their everyday existence. Overall, Modernist Short Fiction and Things argues that short fiction epitomises modernist aesthetics, functioning as a resonant source for investigation and complementing and expanding our understanding of modernist epistemology.

The Elusive Everyday in the Fiction of Marilynne Robinson
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 206

The Elusive Everyday in the Fiction of Marilynne Robinson

Framing Marilynne Robinson's fiction within the dynamics of everyday life, this study highlights the tensions of form and content that haunt moments of transcendence in her work. Robinson's novels, it argues, construct a world that is mimetic as well as symbolic and revelatory. Although the heightened apprehension of the quotidian in Robinson's novels often registers powerfully and beautifully in representational terms, its aesthetic intensity is enacted at the expense of characters who patrol the margins of the ordinary with unceasing vigilance. Inhabiting the everyday self-consciously, her protagonists perform a forced relationship to the ordinary that seldom relaxes into the natural or th...

Eating Otherwise
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 217

Eating Otherwise

'You are what you eat' is an adage taken seriously as this book uncovers connections between the alimentary and ontological.

Contradictory Woolf
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 327

Contradictory Woolf

Contradictory Woolf is a collection of essays selected from approximately 200 papers presented at the 21st Annual International Conference on Virginia Woolf, hosted by the University of Glasgow. The theme of contradiction in Woolf's writing, including her use of the word "but", is widelyexplored in relation to auto/biography, art, philosophy, cognitive science, sexuality, animality, class, mathematics, translation, annotation, poetry, and war. Among the essays collected in this volume are the five keynote addresses - by Judith Allen, Suzanne Bellamy, Marina Warner, Patricia Waugh,and Michael Whitworth - as well as a preface by Jane Goldman and an introduction by the editors.

Virginia Woolf and the World of Books
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 312

Virginia Woolf and the World of Books

A celebration of the centenary of the founding of Leonard and Virginia Woolf’s Hogarth Press.