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Great War Modernists: D. H. Lawrence, H.D. and Richard Aldington

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Great War Modernists: D. H. Lawrence, H.D. and Richard Aldington

Contributors:

By (Author) Lee M. Jenkins

ISBN:

9781350285330

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Bloomsbury Academic

Publication Date:

8th August 2024

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Literary studies: poetry and poets
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers

Dewey:

820.9358

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

200

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Description

Taking 44 Mecklenburgh Square as the focal point and springboard for a critical group study of D.H. Lawrence, H.D. and Richard Aldington, this book offers a fresh perspective on the relationship of modernist biofiction and poetry to the literature of the First World War. A group that Perdita Schaffner described as another Bloomsbury set, the Mecklenburgh Square writers, like the Bloomsbury Group proper, lived in squares and loved in triangles, in Dorothy Parkers famous formulation. Geographically adjacent, these sets intersected socially and, at points, in their aesthetics: both practiced innovative forms of what may broadly be defined as life writing. But, demarcating the Mecklenburgh Square writers from the Bloomsbury Set, the former had its origins in the transatlantic avant-garde: Lawrence. H.D., Aldington (and John Cournos) were all associated with Imagism, the poetic movement which instantiated Anglo-American modernism. Considered as a pro-tem collective, these four poets, all of whom were also novelists and translators, contest the binaries that still obtain between modernist and First World War writing. This group study of Lawrence, H.D., Aldington and Cournos tracks the transition of Imagism from a pre-war mode to a war poetics which includes but is not confined to the trench lyric and it traces, in the transtextual relations between the Mecklenburgh Square novels, the traumatic imprint of the war on modernist life writing.

Author Bio

Lee M. Jenkins is Professor of English at University College Cork, Ireland. She is the author of Wallace Stevens: Rage for Order (1999), The Language of Caribbean Poetry (2005), and The American Lawrence (2015, paperback edn. 2020). She is the co-editor of three collections, Locations of Literary Modernism (2000), The Cambridge Companion to Modernist Poetry (2007), and A History of Modernist Poetry (2015), and the author of many journal articles and book chapters, including a chapter in Bloomsburys forthcoming Handbook to D.H. Lawrence.

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