Conservative Modernists
Literature and Tory Politics in Britain, 1900–1920
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:29th Mar '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Shows that modernism was concocted out of surprising sources, and that one of them was Toryism during 1900–1920.
Conservative Modernists engages with an on-going discussion about modernist aesthetics and politics. The book will be of interest to those working on or around the ideological politics of modernism, early modernist practices, abstract art, modernist magazines, and the politics and culture of Edwardian Britain.Despite sustained scholarly interest in the politics of modernism, astonishingly little attention has been paid to its relationship to Conservatism. Yet modernist writing was imbricated with Tory rhetoric and ideology from when it emerged in the Edwardian era. By investigating the many intersections between Anglophone modernism and Tory politics, Conservative Modernists offers new ways to read major figures such as T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, T. E. Hulme, and Ford Madox Ford. It also highlights the contribution to modernism of lesser-known writers, including Edward Storer, J. M. Kennedy, and A. M. Ludovici. These are the figures to whom it most frequently returns, but, cutting through disciplinary delineations, the book simultaneously reveals the inputs to modernism of a broad range of political writers, philosophers, art historians, and crowd psychologists: from Pascal, Burke, and Disraeli, to Nietzsche, Le Bon, Wallas, Worringer, Ribot, Bergson, and Scheler.
ISBN: 9781108426367
Dimensions: 235mm x 160mm x 18mm
Weight: 490g
254 pages