Edward Upward and Left-Wing Literary Culture in Britain
Editat de Benjamin Kohlmannen Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 sep 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781409450603
ISBN-10: 1409450600
Pagini: 228
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1409450600
Pagini: 228
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
AcademicCuprins
Contents:
Writing of the struggle: an introduction to Edward Upward’s life and works, Benjamin Kohlmann
Playing up: Edward Upward in Cambridge and beyond, Charlotte Charteris
In the 30s: Upward, literature and politics, Ben Clarke
Modalities of 30s writing and writers: the case of Edward Upward
Valentine Cunningham; ’Only degradation and slavery?’: the figure of the teacher in the writing of Edward Upward, Simon Grimble
Radical eccentricity and postwar ordinariness, Nick Hubble
’History will not always be living here’: Edward Upward’s comic historiographies, Steven Matthews
The post-war Kunstlerroman: Edward Upward and Henry Williamson taking themselves seriously, Mark Rawlinson
Upward’s later stories, modernist intimacy and the Marxist unmentionable, Stuart Christie
Edward Upward and the critique of everyday late life, Helen Small
’Walkers, not marchers’: the scope of walking in Upward’s late fiction, Rod Mengham
Edward Upward’s remains, Joseph Elkanah Rosenberg
Bibliography
Index.
Writing of the struggle: an introduction to Edward Upward’s life and works, Benjamin Kohlmann
Playing up: Edward Upward in Cambridge and beyond, Charlotte Charteris
In the 30s: Upward, literature and politics, Ben Clarke
Modalities of 30s writing and writers: the case of Edward Upward
Valentine Cunningham; ’Only degradation and slavery?’: the figure of the teacher in the writing of Edward Upward, Simon Grimble
Radical eccentricity and postwar ordinariness, Nick Hubble
’History will not always be living here’: Edward Upward’s comic historiographies, Steven Matthews
The post-war Kunstlerroman: Edward Upward and Henry Williamson taking themselves seriously, Mark Rawlinson
Upward’s later stories, modernist intimacy and the Marxist unmentionable, Stuart Christie
Edward Upward and the critique of everyday late life, Helen Small
’Walkers, not marchers’: the scope of walking in Upward’s late fiction, Rod Mengham
Edward Upward’s remains, Joseph Elkanah Rosenberg
Bibliography
Index.
Notă biografică
Benjamin Kohlmann is Assistant Professor of English at Freiburg University, Germany, having previously held a postdoctoral fellowship at Columbia University. His most recent articles have been published in ELH, PMLA, and Modernism/Modernity.
Recenzii
A Baker & Taylor Literary Essentials Title'Though often pigeonholed because of his political life, Edward Upward is perhaps the most neglected British writer of the last century. The Spiral Ascent is certainly a neglected masterpiece, both for its arresting formal and stylistic features and as an historical fiction of singular importance. Equally remarkable are his short stories, and to my mind the very late stories in particular, like The Scenic Railway. This superb collection studying the man and his work is long overdue.’
-- Jerome McGann, The University of Virginia, USA
'This is an important, insightful and intriguing collection of essays on Edward Upward, the highly influential and comparatively unknown member of the Auden circle and Christopher Isherwood's closest literary friend. In wide-ranging discussions we are provided with a rich sense of his accomplishments. Upward played a central role in shaping the defining character of English literature of the 1930s and its concern with both art and politics.’
--Peter Stansky, Stanford University, USA
'This essential collection of essays offers a compelling introduction to a leading left-wing figure of the 1930s who is now largely forgotten. … Kohlmann provides a brisk and satisfying summary of Upward’s long life - and the twelve essays cover the author’s Cambridge years, his Communist affiliation, his three decades as a schoolmaster and his early and lifelong commitment to the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.'
-- David Collard, Times Literary Supplement
'Why should Upward matter to literary history more generally? An answer can come in how this volume proves two substantial points: firstly that there are numerous lines of intriguing scholarship waiting to be advanced about art and political commitment which radiate from what might be termed ‘the long 1930s’; but also, ultimately, that the significance of Upward cannot just rest on the 1920s and 1930s writing alone. Part of the strength of Edward Upward and Left-Wing Literary Culture in Britain is that it properly answers the question why critics care about the very differing things he wrote; and then how these novels, short stories and tracts then shed light on the wider culture.'
-- Leo Mellor, University of Cambridge, UK
-- Jerome McGann, The University of Virginia, USA
'This is an important, insightful and intriguing collection of essays on Edward Upward, the highly influential and comparatively unknown member of the Auden circle and Christopher Isherwood's closest literary friend. In wide-ranging discussions we are provided with a rich sense of his accomplishments. Upward played a central role in shaping the defining character of English literature of the 1930s and its concern with both art and politics.’
--Peter Stansky, Stanford University, USA
'This essential collection of essays offers a compelling introduction to a leading left-wing figure of the 1930s who is now largely forgotten. … Kohlmann provides a brisk and satisfying summary of Upward’s long life - and the twelve essays cover the author’s Cambridge years, his Communist affiliation, his three decades as a schoolmaster and his early and lifelong commitment to the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.'
-- David Collard, Times Literary Supplement
'Why should Upward matter to literary history more generally? An answer can come in how this volume proves two substantial points: firstly that there are numerous lines of intriguing scholarship waiting to be advanced about art and political commitment which radiate from what might be termed ‘the long 1930s’; but also, ultimately, that the significance of Upward cannot just rest on the 1920s and 1930s writing alone. Part of the strength of Edward Upward and Left-Wing Literary Culture in Britain is that it properly answers the question why critics care about the very differing things he wrote; and then how these novels, short stories and tracts then shed light on the wider culture.'
-- Leo Mellor, University of Cambridge, UK
Descriere
The first book-length consideration of one of the major British left-wing writers of the twentieth century, this collection positions the life and works of Edward Upward (1903-2009) in the changing artistic, political and social contexts of the last century. The contributors examine the full range of Upward’s work, including a wealth of unpublished materials, bringing attention to his importance as a twentieth-century writer and assessing his legacy for the twenty-first century.