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Politics and Literature at the Dawn of World War II

Autor James A. W. Heffernan
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 noi 2022
Mining the borderlands where history meets literature in Britain and Europe as well as America, this book shows how the imminence and outbreak of World War II ignited the imaginations of writers ranging from Ernest Hemingway, W.H. Auden, and James Joyce to Bertolt Brecht, Evelyn Waugh, Henry Green, and Irène Némirovsky. Taking its cue from Percy Shelley's dictum that great writers are to some extent created by the age in which they live, this book shows how much the politics and warfare of the years from 1939 to 1941 drove the literature of this period. Its novels, poems, and plays differ radically from histories of World War II because-besides being works of imagination-- they are largely products of a particular stage in the author's life as well as of a time at which no one knew how the war would end. This is the first comprehensive study of the impact of the outbreak of the Second World War on the literary work of American, English, and European writers during its first years.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781350324954
ISBN-10: 1350324957
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: 2 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

The first comprehensive study of how the outbreak of the Second World War shaped the literary work of American, English, and European writers during the first years of the war-before its outcome was known

Notă biografică

James A. W. Heffernan is Professor of English Emeritus at Dartmouth College, USA.

Cuprins

Prologue: History and Literature 1. Hitler, FDR, and the Partisan Review in 1939 2. The Spanish Civil War and Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls 3. Prague after Munich: The Plight of Refugees in Martha Gellhorn's A Stricken Field 4. Jan Karski, Patrick Hamilton, and W.H. Auden: Variations on September 1, 1939: 5. Bertolt Brecht, The Svendborg Poems-with a Side Glance at James Joyce's Finnegans Wake 6. The Invasion of Poland and Brecht's Mother Courage 7. The Phony War and Evelyn Waugh's Put Out More Flags 8. Exodus and Occupation in Irène Némirovsky's Suite Française 9. War, Fire, and Sex: The London Blitz in Henry Green's Caught Epilogue

Recenzii

Politics and Literature at the Dawn of World War II offers an appealing enticement to read some of the most inventive works of wartime literature and to recognize their contributions to the historical record.
Jim Heffernan takes us on an amazing tour of literature from across Europe in the first years of World War II. He shows how novelists, playwrights, poets, and journalists responded to the opening stages of one of the great crises of civilization. His lucid introductions and thoughtful analyses show how at times fiction can represent historical experience more truthfully than journalism.
An exciting, novel, and comparative account of the impact of World War II on literature produced in the US, UK, Germany, and France and their authors.
Spoiler alert: this book will unsettle your fixed ideas about the difference between history and fiction, reality and imagination. Ranging across historical novels, poems, and theories of history from the ancients to the moderns, and focused intensely on literary production at the dawn of World War II, Heffernan teases us into thoughtfulness about the way we inhabit time and tell ourselves tales about its meaning. A must for both the general reader and the scholarly specialist.
This beautifully written jewel of a book offers a truly original perspective on a very old theme. Bringing together a suite of literary works all written around 1939, it shows brilliantly how writers, both famous and lesser-known, captured the sense of crisis in a world on the brink of war. Highly recommended.
One rarely dips into a book of literary criticism for pleasure, not these days. But Heffernan's brilliant study of major writers, mostly novelists and poets, on the brink of the Second World War is both salutary and inspired. It's also compulsive reading. Looking at an unlikely crew that includes Hemingway and Brecht, Auden, Woolf, Waugh and Henry Green, Heffernan shows how the terrifying imminence of war excited and refined the imaginations of these writers. This is a book to savor, and one that sends us quickly back to the writers under discussion.
A wonderfully written, subtle, and penetrating account of the interplay of history, politics, and art. James Heffernan's compelling and surprising readings not only reveal the complex histories behind great works, but offer new avenues of appreciation for and judgment of the writers who dared to grapple with a world in crisis.
An important revisionary study of how major writers, both American and European, reacted to the prospect of a second world war by mostly rejecting earlier concepts of heroism. Does the war in Ukraine, which broke out after Heffernan completed this fascinating book, dispel his thesis? We'll see. But in the meantime, his is an original and sobering account of what really happened!
Thoroughly annotated and sourced (the bibliography is 12 pages long, and the notes alone are well worth consulting and not ponderous), this work shows the ambiguity with which writers like Hemingway, Evelyn Waugh, and Henry Green regarded heroic ideals... Highly recommended.