Full metadata
Title
Intersecting transnational English modernisms in interwar France
Description
This dissertation is a study of place and the ways that place plays a role in the stories we tell about ourselves and the ways we interact with the world. It is also the study of a moment in time and how a moment can impact what came before and all that follows. By taking on the subject of 1920s anglophone modernism in France I explore the way this particular time and place drew upon the past and impacted the future of literary culture. Post World War I France serves as a fluid social, political, and cultural space and the moment is one of plural modernisms. I argue that the interwar period was a transnational moment that laid the groundwork for the kind of global interactions that are both positively and negatively impacting the world today. I maintain that the critical work connected to the influence of 1920s France on Modernism deserves a more interstitial analysis than we have seen, one that expressly challenges the national frameworks that lead to a monolithic focus on the specific identity politics attached to race, gender, class and sexuality. I promote instead a consideration of the articulations between all of these factors by expanding, connecting and providing contingencies for the difference within the unity and the similarities that exist beyond it. I consider the way that the idea, history, social culture and geography of France work as sources of literary innovation and as spaces of literary fantasy for three diverse anglophone modernist writers: Jean Rhys, Claude McKay and William Faulkner. Their interaction with the place and the people make for a complex web of articulated difference that is the very core of transnational modernism. By considering their use of place in modernist fiction, I question the centrality of Paris as a modernist topos that too often replaces any broader understanding of France as a diverse cultural and topographical space, and I question the nation-centric logic of modernist criticism that fails to recognize the complex ways that language in general and the English language in particular function in this particular expatriate modernist moment.
Date Created
2016
Contributors
- Dye, Dorothy Jane (Author)
- Clarke, Deborah (Thesis advisor)
- Canovas, Frédéric (Committee member)
- Mallot, Jr., Jack (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- English Literature
- Literature, Modern
- American Literature
- France
- Modernism
- place
- Transnationalism
- War
- Transnationalism in literature
- War in literature
- Setting (Literature)
- Modernism (Literature)--Influence.
- Modernism (Literature)
- Modernism (Literature)--English-speaking countries.
- World War, 1914-1918--France--Influence.
- World War, 1914-1918
- Literature, Modern--21st century.
Resource Type
Extent
iii, 172 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.41258
Statement of Responsibility
by Dorothy Jane Dye
Description Source
Viewed on July 17, 2017
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2016
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 167-172)
Field of study: English
System Created
- 2017-02-01 07:02:12
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:19:58
- 3 years 2 months ago
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