John McGahern's work is not easily conceived of as belatedly modernist. His memorialising, faintly archaic style implies a concern with ‘making it old’ rather than new, suggesting the symptomatic diffidence of many who wrote in the wake of modernism. Nevertheless, McGahern's statements about the ‘pr
John McGahern and Modernism
✍ Scribed by Richard Robinson
- Publisher
- Bloomsbury Academic
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 264
- Series
- Continuum Literary Studies
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
John McGahern's work is not easily conceived of as belatedly modernist. His memorialising, faintly archaic style implies a concern with 'making it old' rather than new, suggesting the symptomatic diffidence of many who wrote in the wake of modernism. Nevertheless, McGahern's statements about the 'presence' of words and the hard-won impersonality of the artwork point to a covert engagement with modernist aesthetics. Offering intertextual interpretations of McGahern's six novels, and of thematically grouped short stories, Richard Robinson reads McGahern's fiction alongside writing by Joyce, Proust, Yeats, Beckett, Nietzsche, Lawrence and Chekhov, amongst others. Drawing out the ways in which McGahern's fiction conceals and reveals its modernist traces, this study considers subjects such as 'low' modernism, the complexity of McGahern's time-writing and his dialectical construction of the relationship between cultural tradition and modernity in Ireland. McGahern's narratives of melancholic return are often read psycho-biographically, but they also involve a return to the remnants of literature, including that of the modernist canon. This book will be of interest not only to McGahern scholars but also to those who contemplate the compromised legacies of literary modernism in late-twentieth century and contemporary writing.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1 ‘Useless Passion’
2 Mining the Self: The Dark
3 Quoting Modernism in the Short Stories
4 Psychoanalytical Signification and the Remnants of Literature
5 ‘Low’ Modernism: The Pornographer
6 Yeats, Nietzsche, Theatricality and Will in Amongst Women
7 ‘Careful Neutrality’
8 The ‘Old Pieties’: Modernity and ‘The Country Funeral’
9 Habit, Memory and Time
10 ‘Everything that had Flowered had now Come to Fruit’
Conclusion
Works Cited
Index
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