Untimely forms: late modernism, war, essayistic form

<p>This thesis argues that the geopolitical crises of the middle to late twentieth century catalysed the emergence of a literary practice I call ‘long-form essayism’.</p> <p>The literary essay has long stood accused of being secondary or ancillary, next to more established genres...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Topalović, D
Other Authors: Mackay, M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
_version_ 1811141208235311104
author Topalović, D
author2 Mackay, M
author_facet Mackay, M
Topalović, D
author_sort Topalović, D
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis argues that the geopolitical crises of the middle to late twentieth century catalysed the emergence of a literary practice I call ‘long-form essayism’.</p> <p>The literary essay has long stood accused of being secondary or ancillary, next to more established genres like poetry or the novel. In recent years, however, the rise of hybrid categories like essayistic fiction and creative nonfiction, in concomitance with renewed debates concerning the novel’s viability, has led to growing interest in the essay form. My thesis makes an intervention in the ongoing revival of essay scholarship by showing how essayistic form offered a rich repertoire of technical resources in the service of writers anxious to confront the violence of the Second World War—whether anticipated, lived, or remembered—without resorting to the descriptive capabilities of fiction alone. Neither short nor minor, the book-length essays in my thesis revive older, supposedly outmoded genres of writing—among them, the philosophical dialogue, the commonplace book, the spoof encyclopaedia, the aphorism, the ramble—which can be placed under the main rubric of literary essayism. This loose body of writing, I contend, emerged in the last years of the interwar as a formal riposte to the looming violence of war, and has since then solidified into a highly inventive and formally exuberant model for writing historical crisis, especially at the scale and pace of long-form prose.</p> <p>My thesis is organized in two parts. Part One focuses on three works written during the Second World War, namely Rebecca West’s <em>Black Lamb and Grey Falcon</em>, Cyril Connolly’s <em>The Unquiet Grave</em>, and Alberto Savinio’s <em>Nuova enciclopedia</em>. Part Two moves to the end of the century, from the 1980s to the 1990s, so as to investigate the twin experiments with essayistic form in Claudio Magris’s Danube and W.G. Sebald’s <em>The Rings of Saturn</em>.</p>
first_indexed 2024-09-25T04:34:13Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:e6380420-f102-4b7d-9a76-45975001b100
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:34:13Z
publishDate 2024
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:e6380420-f102-4b7d-9a76-45975001b1002024-09-05T08:26:10ZUntimely forms: late modernism, war, essayistic formThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:e6380420-f102-4b7d-9a76-45975001b100Travelers' writings, EuropeanEssayModernism (Literature)Exiles' writings, Central EuropeanWorld War, 1939-1945Comparative literatureEnglishEnglishHyrax Deposit2024Topalović, DMackay, M<p>This thesis argues that the geopolitical crises of the middle to late twentieth century catalysed the emergence of a literary practice I call ‘long-form essayism’.</p> <p>The literary essay has long stood accused of being secondary or ancillary, next to more established genres like poetry or the novel. In recent years, however, the rise of hybrid categories like essayistic fiction and creative nonfiction, in concomitance with renewed debates concerning the novel’s viability, has led to growing interest in the essay form. My thesis makes an intervention in the ongoing revival of essay scholarship by showing how essayistic form offered a rich repertoire of technical resources in the service of writers anxious to confront the violence of the Second World War—whether anticipated, lived, or remembered—without resorting to the descriptive capabilities of fiction alone. Neither short nor minor, the book-length essays in my thesis revive older, supposedly outmoded genres of writing—among them, the philosophical dialogue, the commonplace book, the spoof encyclopaedia, the aphorism, the ramble—which can be placed under the main rubric of literary essayism. This loose body of writing, I contend, emerged in the last years of the interwar as a formal riposte to the looming violence of war, and has since then solidified into a highly inventive and formally exuberant model for writing historical crisis, especially at the scale and pace of long-form prose.</p> <p>My thesis is organized in two parts. Part One focuses on three works written during the Second World War, namely Rebecca West’s <em>Black Lamb and Grey Falcon</em>, Cyril Connolly’s <em>The Unquiet Grave</em>, and Alberto Savinio’s <em>Nuova enciclopedia</em>. Part Two moves to the end of the century, from the 1980s to the 1990s, so as to investigate the twin experiments with essayistic form in Claudio Magris’s Danube and W.G. Sebald’s <em>The Rings of Saturn</em>.</p>
spellingShingle Travelers' writings, European
Essay
Modernism (Literature)
Exiles' writings, Central European
World War, 1939-1945
Comparative literature
English
Topalović, D
Untimely forms: late modernism, war, essayistic form
title Untimely forms: late modernism, war, essayistic form
title_full Untimely forms: late modernism, war, essayistic form
title_fullStr Untimely forms: late modernism, war, essayistic form
title_full_unstemmed Untimely forms: late modernism, war, essayistic form
title_short Untimely forms: late modernism, war, essayistic form
title_sort untimely forms late modernism war essayistic form
topic Travelers' writings, European
Essay
Modernism (Literature)
Exiles' writings, Central European
World War, 1939-1945
Comparative literature
English
work_keys_str_mv AT topalovicd untimelyformslatemodernismwaressayisticform