000 01379cam a2200157ua 4500
020 _a0-340-76325-6
082 _a801.95
_bMAT/M
100 0 _aMatthews, Steven
245 1 0 _aModernism
260 _aLondon
_bArnold
_c2004
300 _a160p.
520 _aThe early Twentieth Century produced some of the most exhilarating literature in the English language. Writers from Britain, America and Ireland challenged literary conventions as their perspectives evolved in a dynamic but newly unsettling world. Social pressures, urbanization, new technologies, and political activism from women's groups and others within the British Empire, all raised the awareness of writers and prompted them to rethink and reshape their work. In addition, intellectual and literary debates from the late nineteenth century lingered into the next century and World War I provided a shocking jolt to the established ways of life and changed a generation of writers and the course of literature. This book considers the major authors and texts of the modernist period, mapping the literary alongside the historical, social and literary issues of the time. It provides a clear overview and analysis of works by Virginia Woolf, T.S. Eliot, D.H. Lawrence, Ezra Pound, James Joyce, Joseph Conrad, E.M. Forster and many others.
650 _aModernism
650 0 _aEnglish literature
942 _cBK
999 _c17862
_d17862