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Examines British women's experimental writing in historical contexts, 1945-1970
Filling in a blank spot in the history of twentieth-century women's writing, Carole Sweeney examines the work of five experimental writers, Anna Kavan, Brigid Brophy, Christine Brooke-Rose, Eva Figes and Ann Quin, whose writing has been neglected in accounts of the development of post-1945 British literature. Each of these writers, Sweeney argues, engaged in diverse formal experiments that challenge the critical commonplace suggesting that after the end of aesthetic modernism the mid-century British novel was characterised by a wholesale return to realism. Avoiding any insistence on a straightforward opposition between literary realism and experimentalism, this study draws upon original archival and biographical material and offers close readings of the creative and critical work of these 'vagabond' writers, demonstrating how they wrote against aesthetic and thematic conventions of their times and negotiated (and often repudiated) concepts of 'feminine' writing.
Carole Sweeney is Reader in Modern Literature at Goldsmiths, Department of English, University of London. She has published extensively on modernism and race, interwar primitivism and on the contemporary novel. She is the author of Fetish to Subject: From Fetish to Subject: Race, Modernism, and Primitivism, 1919-1935 (Praeger, 2004) and Michel Houellebecq and the Literature of Despair (Bloomsbury, 2013).
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