Chapter 1: Great War
Modernisms Chapter 2: A. R. Orage and
Modernist Publicism in the era of the First World War
Chapter 3: War, The New Age and Guild Socialism's
Political Modernism
Chapter 4: The New Age's Radical
Intelligentsia and Modernism
Chapter 5: Wyndham Lewis's
Modernist Aesthetics
Chapter 6: H. G. Wells and
the First World War
Conclusion Bibliography
Index
A study of the politics and philosophy of writers contributing to the 'Little Magazine', The New Age during 1907 and 1922.
Paul Jackson is Senior Lecturer in History at the University
of Northampton, UK.
'This is an intelligent and thought-provoking study which
encourages us to rethink the meaning of 'modernism'. After reading
Paul Jackson's book, historians and literary scholars will have to
question the utility of a narrow, aesthetic definition of
modernism. Jackson shows, in several fine case studies, that the
concept has equal validity for exaplaining the many ways in which
intellectuals and politicians were trying to make sense of a world
in flux. Great War Modernisms is an important contribution to
twentieth-century intellectual history.'
*Dan Stone, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK*
‘Jackson explores the intense mood of expectancy of a new era
induced in the generation of British intellectuals directly
affected by the catastrophe of the First World War. In doing so he
shows how a wide variety of longings for regeneration are linked
with the radical experimentations in aesthetics, social
organization, economics, and politics that fed into inter-war
European thought - each of which are increasingly recognized as
different manifestations of modernism. As a result, all too
familiar 'English' figures suddenly appear in a fresh 'continental'
light. This new approach hopefully signals a belated readiness of
British cultural historians to break out of decades of self-imposed
insularity and isolationism when considering Europe-wide cultures
of modernism.'
*Professor Roger Griffin, Department of History, Oxford Brookes
University, UK*
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