Merely Gothic in disguise? : discontinuity, continuity and the aesthetics of British modernism
The ideology of early British Modernism, as derived by Eliot and Pound primarily from the writings of T.E. Hulme, is focused on a valorization of the Primitive, Byzantine or 'Classical' (objective) and a rejection of the Romantic (subjective). In Hulme's work, however, it can be shown...
Main Author: | Fletcher, Christopher John Yates |
---|---|
Published: |
University of Edinburgh
1992
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.650971 |
Similar Items
-
Iain Banks: the renovation of the gothic
by: Martingale, Moria Jean
Published: (2009) -
Chance in the modern British novel, 1945-1978
by: Jordan, Julia Emily
Published: (2008) -
Virginia Woolf and the Russians : Readings of Russian Literature in British Modernism
by: Protopopova, Darya
Published: (2010) -
'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and Weldon
by: Johnson, Heather L.
Published: (1997) -
The Making of Modern Children's Literature : Quality and ideology in British clbildren's publishing of the 1960s and 1970s
by: Pearson, Lucy
Published: (2010)