Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Intermodernism and the Ethics of Lateness in Evelyn Waugh and Harold Acton

2022; Routledge; Volume: 104; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/0013838x.2022.2141474

ISSN

1744-4217

Autores

Allan Johnson,

Tópico(s)

Travel Writing and Literature

Resumo

Evelyn Waugh and Harold Acton had a deeply ambivalent relationship to the narrative of modernism, and their attempts to negotiate their position within the literary milieu of their own time clearly registers the tensions inherent in much of late modernist writing. Early modernism and high modernism were concerned with the nature of the ‘firstness’, of innovation and change, but as this article argues, intermodernism is best seen as an ethical mode that saw itself as increasingly removed from the organising attitudes of literary revolution. In their mid- and late-period writing, Acton and Waugh were concerned with structures of age-old history and prestige-notably Catholicism (Waugh) and China (Acton)-that they felt outweighed the innovations of modernism and made the modern aesthetic spirit seem clumsy, if not painfully late.

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