Researching, analyzing, and theorising intermodernism, this book focuses on three kinds of intermodern features in texts that are typically ignored in accounts of modernism or The Auden Generation: cultural features (intermodernists typically represent working-class and working middle-class cultures); political features (intermodernists are politically radical, ''radically eccentric''); and literary features (intermodernists are committed to non-canonical, even ''middlebrow'' or ''mass'' genres). To encourage future scholarship on intermodernism, the volume concludes with an appendix, ''Who Were the Intermodernists?'', and a bibliography of primary and secondary sources.
- Key features
- Presents ten original chapters written by active and prominent scholars of mid-century British literary culture
- Launches an ambitious, long-term project that marks out a new period and style in twentieth-century literary history
- Broad-ranging, treating novels, journalism, manifestos, short stories, film, poetry, memoirs, letters, and travel narratives of the interwar, war, and immediately post-World War II years
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