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British Literature and Culture in Second World Wartime: For the Duration by Beryl Pong

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9780198840923
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9780198840923
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Description

British Literature and Culture in Second World Wartime excavates British late modernism's relationship to war in terms of chronophobia: a joint fear of the past and future. As a wartime between, but distinct from, those of the First World War and the Cold War, Second World wartime involves an anxiety that is both repetition and imaginary: both a dread of past violence unleashed anew, and that of a future violence still ungraspable. Identifying a constellation of temporalities and affects under three tropes--time capsules, time zones, and ruins--this volume contends that Second World wartime is a pivotal moment when wartime surpassed the boundaries of a specific state of emergency, becoming first routine and then open-ended. It offers a synoptic, wide-ranging look at writers on the home front, including Henry Green, Elizabeth Bowen, Virginia Woolf, and Rose Macaulay, through a variety of genres, such as life-writing, the novel, and the short story. It also considers an array of cultural and archival material from photographers such as Cecil Beaton, filmmakers such as Charles Crichton, and artists such as John Minton. It shows how figures harnessed or exploited their media's temporal properties to formally register the distinctiveness of this wartime through a complex feedback between anticipation and retrospection, oftentimes fashioning the war as a memory, even while it was taking place. While offering a strong foundation for new readers of the mid-century, the book's overall theoretical focus on chronophobia will be an important intervention for those already working in the field.

About the Author
Beryl Pong is a Vice-Chancellor's Fellow at the University of Sheffield.

Reviews
A pioneering work advancing scholarship in temporal studies, this critical analysis examines the duration and effect of WW II on prewar, wartime, and postwar literature, film, art, and other media... Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. * B. Adler, Georgia Southwestern State University, CHOICE *
An imaginative, deeply researched, and powerfully revealing study of how British writers, painters, photographers, and filmmakers addressed the distinctive temporalities of the Second World War, stylishly elucidating problems of time and form that range from the anticipatory griefs of late-modernist memoir to the equivocal futurity of post-war cinema's children of the metropolitan bomb-sites. Always alert to artists' own international interests, influences, and allegiances, this book also offers one of the most cosmopolitan, as well as comprehensive, interpretations of British cultural production in those bleakly transformative years. * Marina MacKay, author of Ian Watt: The Novel and the Wartime Critic *
We have known for a while now that the time of war is not one time. But not all wars are polytemporal in the same way. Beryl Pong has written our fullest, most literary account yet of the Second World War's profuse temporalities. Of these, surely the most hauntingly particular are proleptic mourning, preemptive ruination, and "dreading forward". Pong expands our lexicon for loss in advance of loss. * Paul K. Saint-Amour, author of Tense Future: Modernism, Total War, Encyclopedic Form *



Book Information
ISBN 9780198840923
Author Beryl Pong
Format Hardback
Page Count 308
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 1g
Dimensions(mm) 218mm * 147mm * 24mm

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