Into the Mele: Culture/Politics/Intellectuals
By (Author) Francis Mulhern
Verso Books
Verso Books
4th September 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Cultural studies
Sociology
Far-left political ideologies and movements
820.93581
Paperback
304
Width 140mm, Height 210mm, Spine 20mm
278g
Into the Mele collects Francis Mulhern's insightful critical writing, much of it in the hybrid literary form that Bagehot described as 'the review-like essay and the essay-like review'. It opens with questions of nationality, from F. R. Leavis's efforts to assert a normatively English literary subject and Ferdinand Mount's exploration of English cultural landscapes to Tom Nairn's political vision of England and Scotland 'after Britain' and Joe Cleary's account of Irish modernism. Another cluster of texts concerns intellectuals and, in one way or another, the politics of revolution and counter-revolution, from Burke to the present. There is an updated sketch of the magazine n +1 as heir to the militant traditions of Partisan Review. What is literature Sartre's answer was: committed literature. The writer as such was of the left. But culture and politics are discrepant practices, inhabiting one another in permanent tension. In its embrace of provisionality and its magpie curiosity, Mulhern observes, the essay is a mode especially well suited to the purposes of a Marxist criticism morally committed to the value of being surprised.
Few critics could match the subtlety of Mulhern's interpretations or the eloquent precision of his prose. -- Maud Ellman * Critical Inquiry *
Francis Mulhern (born 1952) comes from Enniskillen in Northern Ireland. His books include Figures of Catastrophe, Culture/Metaculture and The Moment of 'Scrutiny'. He lives in London and is Associate Editor at New Left Review.