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2015/12/01

The Extinct Scene: Late Modernism and Everyday Life | New from CUP

"A superb conceptual and historical contribution to 20th-century literary studies."--Laura Doyle

NEW RELEASES

LITERARY STUDIES

LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM
Late Modernism and Everyday Life

Thomas Davis

In 1935, the English writer Stephen Spender wrote that the historical pressures of his era should "turn the reader's and writer's attention outwards from himself to the world." Combining historical, formalist, and archival approaches, Thomas S. Davis examines late modernism's decisive turn toward everyday life, locating in the heightened scrutiny of details, textures, and experiences an intimate attempt to conceptualize geopolitical disorder.

The Extinct Scene reads a range of mid-century texts, films, and phenomena that reflect the decline of the British Empire and seismic shifts in the global political order. Davis follows the rise of documentary film culture and the British Documentary Film Movement. He then considers the influence of late modernist periodical culture on social attitudes and customs, and analyzes novels by Virginia Woolf, Christopher Isherwood, and Colin MacInnes; the interwar travel narratives of W. H. Auden, Christopher Isherwood, and George Orwell; the wartime gothic fiction of Elizabeth Bowen; the poetry of H. D.; the sketches of Henry Moore; and the postimperial Anglophone Caribbean works of Vic Reid, Sam Selvon, and George Lamming. 

By considering this varied group of writers, artists, and cultural leaders, Davis recasts late modernism as an art of scale: by detailing the particulars of everyday life, the movement could better project the large-scale undoing of history.



$60.00 $48.00 | Cloth 
| 328 pages |  £41.50*
 
 
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