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Unseasonable Youth - Modernism, Colonialism, and the Fiction of Development (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,977
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Unseasonable Youth - Modernism, Colonialism, and the Fiction of Development (Hardcover)
Series: Modernist Literature and Culture
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Unseasonable Youth examines a range of modernist-era fictions that
cast doubt on the ideology of progress through the figure of
stunted or endless adolescence. Novels of youth by Oscar Wilde,
Olive Schreiner, Rudyard Kipling, Joseph Conrad, H.G. Wells, James
Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Jean Rhys, and Elizabeth Bowen disrupt the
inherited conventions of the bildungsroman in order to criticize
bourgeois values and to reinvent the biographical plot, but also to
explore the contradictions inherent in mainstream developmental
discourses of self, nation, and empire. The intertwined tropes of
frozen youth and uneven development, as motifs of failed progress,
play a crucial role in the emergence of dilatory modernist style
and in the reimagination of colonial space at the fin-de-siecle.
The genre-bending logic of uneven development - never wholly absent
from the coming-of-age novel -- takes on a new and more intense
form in modernism as it fixes its broken allegory to the problem of
colonial development. In novels of unseasonable youth, the
nineteenth-century idea of world progress comes up against stubborn
signs of underdevelopment and uneven development, just at the same
moment that post-Darwinian racial sciences and quasi-Freudian
sexological discourses lend greater influence to the idea that
certain forms of human difference cannot be mitigated by civilizing
or developmental forces. In this historical context, the temporal
meaning and social vocation of the bildungsroman undergo a
comprehensive shift, as the history of the novel indexes the
gradual displacement of historical-progressive thinking by
anthropological-structural thinking in the Age of Empire."
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