This book describes a major literary culture caught in the act
of becoming minor. In 1939, Virginia Woolf wrote in her diary,
"Civilisation has shrunk." Her words captured not only the onset of
World War II, but also a longer-term reversal of national fortune.
The first comprehensive account of modernism and imperialism in
England, "A Shrinking Island" tracks the joint eclipse of modernist
aesthetics and British power from the literary experiments of the
1930s through the rise of cultural studies in the 1950s.
Jed Esty explores the effects of declining empire on modernist
form--and on the very meaning of Englishness. He ranges from
canonical figures (T. S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf) to influential
midcentury intellectuals (J. M. Keynes and J.R.R. Tolkien), from
cultural studies pioneers (Raymond Williams and E. P. Thompson) to
postwar migrant writers (George Lamming and Doris Lessing).
Focusing on writing that converts the potential energy of the
contracting British state into the language of insular integrity,
he argues that an anthropological ethos of cultural holism came
home to roost in late-imperial England. Esty's interpretation
challenges popular myths about the death of English literature. It
portrays the survivors of the modernist generation not as aesthetic
dinosaurs, but as participants in the transition from empire to
welfare state, from metropolitan art to national culture. Mixing
literary criticism with postcolonial theory, his account of London
modernism's end-stages and after-lives provides a fresh take on
major works while redrawing the lines between modernism and
postmodernism.
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