イングランドのまま娘:イギリスの女性モダニストとナショナル・イマジナリー<br>Step-Daughters of England : British Women Modernists and the National Imaginary

イングランドのまま娘:イギリスの女性モダニストとナショナル・イマジナリー
Step-Daughters of England : British Women Modernists and the National Imaginary

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 349 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780719061639
  • DDC分類 823.91099287

基本説明

Shows how four British women modernists - Dorothy Richardson, Sylvia Townsend Warner, Mary Butts and Virginia Woolf - used experimental literary techniques in order to situate themselves as national subjects.

Full Description


Jane Garrity shows how four British women modernists - Dorothy Richardson, Sylvia Townsend Warner, Mary Butts and Virginia Woolf - used experimental literary techniques in order to situate themselves as national subjects. Reading literary texts through the lens of material culture, this book makes a major contribution to the new modernist studies by arguing that women's imaginative work is inseparable from their ambivalent and complicated relation to Britain's imperial history. Drawing on extensive archival research, Garrity takes as her point of departure the ubiquitous maternal and racial link to national identification during the interwar period. Each chapter foregrounds a different range of cultural developments that coincided with the rise of modernism, such as emerging visual techniques, the revival of British neo-medievalism, ethnographic work on primitive mysticism, and nostalgia for English ruralism. By locating both canonical and non-canonical works of female literary modernism within broader cultural discourses, Garrity demonstrates the intersections among nationalism, imperialism, gender and sexuality in the construction of English national culture. -- .

Contents

IntroductionDomesticating the empire - British womanhood and national culture; "Neither English nor civilised" - Dorothy Richardson's spectatrix and the feminine crusade; encoding bi-location - Sylvia Townsend Warner and the primitive erotics of Sapphic dissimulation; Mary Butt's England - racial memory and the daughter's mystical assertion of nationhood; mapping "the body of our mother" - national desire, imperial nostalgia, and language in Virginia Woolf; epilogue - rebuilding the house of England.