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Was early Hollywood, with its celluloid dreams and theme-park
cemeteries, the beginning of the end of the Western humanist
tradition? British Novelists in Hollywood calls attention to the
shifting grounds of cultural expression by highlighting Hollywood
as a site that unsettled definitions and narratives of colonialism
and national identity. Drawn to Los Angeles for a variety of
reasons that included everything from easy money, political
disaffection, spiritual longing, and the Mediterranean climate,
writers such as Aldous Huxley, Christopher Isherwood, Anthony
Powell, J.B Priestly, Dodie Smith and Evelyn Waugh, and P.G.
Wodehouse represent an incursion of expert settlers representing
British culture and civilization. But instead of establishing
themselves once again with a mission of colonial superiority, they
soon found that their cultural power clashed with the commercially
inviolable mass production of American popular culture. Lisa
Colletta argues that the British experience in Southern California
challenged traditional ideas of national identity and power and
implicated them in a complex of choices and influences filtered
through the Hollywood dream machine.
British Novelists in Hollywood, 1935-1965 calls attention to the
shifting grounds of cultural expression by highlighting Hollywood
as a site that unsettled definitions and narratives of colonialism
and national identity for prominent British novelists such as
Christopher Isherwood, P.G. Wodehouse, Evelyn Waugh, and J.B.
Priestley.
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