In the decades following the immediately postwar period in Britain, a loose grouping of experimental writers that included Alan Burns, Christine Brooke-Rose, B. S. Johnson, and Ann Quin worked against the dominance, as they saw it, of the realist novel of the literary mainstream. Late Modernism and the Avant-Garde British Novel reassesses the experimentalism versus realism debates of the period, and finds a body of work engaged with, rather than merely antagonistic towards, the literary culture it sought to renovate. Charting these engagements, it shows how they have significance not just for our understanding of these decades but for the broader movement of the novel through the century. This volume takes some of the claims made about experimental fiction--that it is unreadable, nonlinear, elliptical, errant, plotless--and reimagines these descriptors as historically inscribed tendencies that express the period's investment in the idea of the accidental. These novels are interested in the fleeting and the fugitive, in discontinuity and shock. The experimental novel cultivates an interest in methods of representation that are oblique: attempting to conjure the world at an angle, or in the rear-view mirror; by ellipsis or evasion. These concepts--error, indeterminacy, uncertainty, accident--all bear a relation to that which evades or resists interpretation and meaning. Asking what are the wider political, ethical, and philosophical correlates of this incommensurability, Late Modernism and the Avant-Garde British Novel reads experimental literature in this light, as suffused with anxiety about its adequacy in the light of its status as necessarily imitative and derivative, and therefore redolent of the forms of not-knowing and uncertainty that mark late modernism more generally.
About the AuthorJulia Jordan is Associate Professor of English at UCL. She is the author of Chance and the Modern British Novel (2010), and she has co-edited an anthology of B.S. Johnson's writing entitled Well Done God! (Picador, 2013). She has also published essays in a variety of collections and journals on aspects of twentieth-century literature, and in particular the experimental writing of the 1960s and 70s.
ReviewsJordan's critical readings are of the highest quality, and her subject matter is decidedly worthy of analysis. * Wojciech Drag, University of Wroclaw, Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies *
Late Modernism and the Avant-Garde British Novel will be invaluable to scholars as a work attuned to that moment's favoured modes of response, the debates it inaugurated around questions of form, and the powerful resistance it offers to recuperation on the terms of prevalent aesthetic and periodizing categories. * Adam Guy, Modern Language Review *
Book InformationISBN 9780198857280
Author Julia JordanFormat Hardback
Page Count 256
Imprint Oxford University PressPublisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 508g
Dimensions(mm) 240mm * 160mm * 19mm