Modernism and Naturalism in British and Irish Fiction, 1880–1930

Simon Joyce author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:1st Sep '16

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Modernism and Naturalism in British and Irish Fiction, 1880–1930 cover

Through studies of individual writers, this book reveals the inextricable connection between naturalism and literary modernism.

In this volume, Simon Joyce examines the ways in which readers have come to view canonical modernists such as James Joyce and Virginia Woolf, showing how their work might be read in conjunction with lesser-known Irish and 'New Woman' novelists such as George Moore, Sarah Grand, and George Egerton.This book argues that the history of literary modernism is inextricably connected with naturalism. Simon Joyce traces a complex response among aesthetes to the work of Émile Zola at the turn of the century, recovering naturalism's assumed compatibility with impressionism as a central cause of their ambivalence. Highlighting a little-studied strain of reflexive naturalism in which Zola's mode of analytical observation is turned upon the authors themselves, Joyce suggests that the confluence of naturalism and impressionism formed the precondition for so-called stream-of-consciousness writing. This style served to influence not only the work of canonical modernists such as Joyce and Woolf, but also that of lesser-known writers such as George Moore, Sarah Grand, and George Egerton.

ISBN: 9781107445741

Dimensions: 228mm x 152mm x 13mm

Weight: 330g

226 pages