1st Edition

English Fiction of the Early Modern Period 1890-1940

By Douglas Hewitt Copyright 1988
    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is an ambitious and fascinating analysis of early twentieth-century English literature from Kipling, Conrad, Lawrence and Forster through figures like Joyce and Woolf to writers such as Evelyn Waugh. There are chapters on the younger writers of the age as well as the more popular minor writers like Buchan and Dornford Yates.


    1. Surviving giants - Hardy and James.  2. Joseph Conrad and the politics of power.  3. Rudyard Kipling - Imperial responsibility and literary escape.  4. E.M. Forster - The proclamations of the liberal agnostic.  5. Fictional politics and some minor forms; Arnold Bennett on the Pentonville omnibus.  6. Virginia Woolf and the search for essences; Modernism and its implications.  7. James Joyce, the professors and the common reader.  8. The reading public and the rise of a profession.  9. D.H.Lawrence - Our Bert versus our Lorenzo; the 1930s - an aftermath.Notes on biography
    Major works and criticism

    Biography

    Douglas Hewitt