Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £57.47 GBP
Regular price £60.00 GBP Sale price £57.47 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 6 days lead

Modernism and the Locations of Literary Heritage

This book examines how Forster, Eliot and Woolf responded to the development of the heritage industry in England.

Andrea Zemgulys (Author)

9780521889247, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 25 September 2008

256 pages
23.5 x 16 x 1.9 cm, 0.54 kg

Modernist writers in the early twentieth century aimed to write in inventive and transformative ways, but they lived in places celebrated for their association with the achievements of past generations. For E. M. Forster, T. S. Eliot, and Virginia Woolf, this contrast was strongly felt: living and writing in London, they found themselves in a city that was being fashioned as 'historic' in ways incongruous with their own critical ideals. In this innovative study, Andrea Zemgulys reads the early writings of Forster, Eliot and Woolf against the development of a growing heritage industry in England generally and London in particular. Her study offers fresh analyses of major works and a fascinating history of the making of literary and historical heritage in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Britain.

Introduction
Part I. Heritage: 1. English originals: literary heritage in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
2. Reading in place: the subjects of literary geography
3. Making it newly old: heritage and memory in turn-of-the-century London
Part II. Modernism: 4. Transit: modernism's London and E. M. Forster's Chelsea
5. In London with a Baedeker: touring T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land
6. Consummate labor: Virginia Woolf's trek to a better literature
Conclusion
Index.

Subject Areas: Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose writers [DSK], Literary theory [DSA], Literature: history & criticism [DS]

View full details