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Archive | 2015

The Extinct Scene: Late Modernism and Everyday Life

Thomas Davis

AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Late Modernism and the Outward Turn1. The Last Snapshot of the British Intelligentsia: Documentary, Mass-Observation, and the Fate of the Liberal Avant-Garde2. The Historical Novel at Historys End3. Late Modernisms Geopolitical Imagination: Everyday Life in the Global Hot Zones4. War Gothic5. It is de age of colonial concern: Vernacular Fictions and Political BelongingEpilogue: Appointments to keep in the pastNotesBibliographyIndex


Textual Practice | 2013

Elizabeth Bowen's war gothic

Thomas Davis

Elizabeth Bowens fiction from World War II is among the most celebrated of the era. As most readers know, her remarkable collection of wartime short fiction, The Demon Lover and Other Stories, joins war writing with the gothic. This odd conjuncture has produced two dominant modes of reading Bowens stories: either the immediate historical context of World War II guides interpretation or Bowens deployment of gothic tropes and imagery invokes a longer tradition of Anglo-Irish gothic fiction, thereby restoring a specifically Irish historical context to these stories. Rather than privilege one form of reading over the other, I suggest that the defining features of Bowens war gothic – disorderly temporalities, alternating narratives, hauntings – formally mediate between these two historical moments. On my reading, Bowens stories transfer the anxieties of Anglo-Irish gothic fiction – the erosion of property rights, wealth distribution, and inheritance – to the scene of the Peoples War. Bowens gothic fictions, then, treat the war populism of the 1940s and the calls for a more equitable postwar democracy as augurs of the same economic and social disaster that befell the Anglo-Irish landowners. In Bowens hands, a genre initially suited for a dying settler colonial class is uniquely, if counter-intuitively, appropriate for a bombed imperial metropolis. These gothic stories of unsettled pasts and ghostly returns function as anxious ruminations on the near future, distress signals from the world to come.


Literature Compass | 2012

Late Modernism: British Literature at Midcentury

Thomas Davis


Modernism/modernity Print Plus | 2018

Postcolonial Philology and Nearly Reading the World-System in Print Form

Christopher GoGwilt; Thomas Davis; Nathan Hensley


Modernism/modernity Print Plus | 2018

Global Modernism at Sea: Maritime Labor and Surface Reading in Richard Hughes’s In Hazard

Nicole Rizzuto; Thomas Davis; Nathan Hensley


Modernism/modernity Print Plus | 2018

By the Waysides, or, Bypass and Splendor

Neferti Tadiar; Thomas Davis; Nathan Hensley


Modernism/modernity Print Plus | 2018

Not a Globe but a Planet: Modernism and the Epoch of Modernity

Timothy Wientzen; Thomas Davis; Nathan Hensley


Modernism/modernity Print Plus | 2018

Scale and Form; or, What was Global Modernism?

Thomas Davis; Nathan Hensley


Modernism/modernity Print Plus | 2018

Global Capitalism and the Novel

Bashir Abu-Manneh; Thomas Davis; Nathan Hensley


Modernism/modernity Print Plus | 2018

Thinking Back through Empires

Laura Doyle; Thomas Davis; Nathan Hensley

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