British Literature and Culture in Second World Wartime: For the Duration: Oxford Mid-Century Studies Series
Autor Beryl Pongen Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 mai 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198840923
ISBN-10: 0198840926
Pagini: 308
Ilustrații: 11 Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 147 x 218 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Mid-Century Studies Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198840926
Pagini: 308
Ilustrații: 11 Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 147 x 218 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Mid-Century Studies Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
A pioneering work advancing scholarship in temporal studies, this critical analysis examines the duration and effect of WW II on prewar, wartime, and postwar literature, film, art, and other media... Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
An imaginative, deeply researched, and powerfully revealing study of how British writers, painters, photographers, and filmmakers addressed the distinctive temporalities of the Second World War, stylishly elucidating problems of time and form that range from the anticipatory griefs of late-modernist memoir to the equivocal futurity of post-war cinema's children of the metropolitan bomb-sites. Always alert to artists' own international interests, influences, and allegiances, this book also offers one of the most cosmopolitan, as well as comprehensive, interpretations of British cultural production in those bleakly transformative years.
We have known for a while now that the time of war is not one time. But not all wars are polytemporal in the same way. Beryl Pong has written our fullest, most literary account yet of the Second World War's profuse temporalities. Of these, surely the most hauntingly particular are proleptic mourning, preemptive ruination, and "dreading forward". Pong expands our lexicon for loss in advance of loss.
An imaginative, deeply researched, and powerfully revealing study of how British writers, painters, photographers, and filmmakers addressed the distinctive temporalities of the Second World War, stylishly elucidating problems of time and form that range from the anticipatory griefs of late-modernist memoir to the equivocal futurity of post-war cinema's children of the metropolitan bomb-sites. Always alert to artists' own international interests, influences, and allegiances, this book also offers one of the most cosmopolitan, as well as comprehensive, interpretations of British cultural production in those bleakly transformative years.
We have known for a while now that the time of war is not one time. But not all wars are polytemporal in the same way. Beryl Pong has written our fullest, most literary account yet of the Second World War's profuse temporalities. Of these, surely the most hauntingly particular are proleptic mourning, preemptive ruination, and "dreading forward". Pong expands our lexicon for loss in advance of loss.
Notă biografică
Beryl Pong is a Vice-Chancellor's Fellow at the University of Sheffield.