Paranoid Modernism
Literary Experiment, Psychosis, and the Professionalization of English Society
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 27 September 2001
- ISBN 9780198187554
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages368 pages
- Size 224x146x25 mm
- Weight 544 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
What provoked the fierce and systematic 'will to experiment' that was Modernism? Paranoia--thought especially to afflict those whose identities were founded on professional expertise--was described in the contemporary psychiatric literature as the violent imposition of system onto life's randomness. Modernism's great writers--Conrad, Ford, Lewis, Lawrence--both lived and wrote about these psychopathies of expertise.
MoreLong description:
The early twentieth century notoriously saw an unprecedented wave of experiment in the arts. So intense was this activity that one can without exaggeration speak of a will to experiment (to 'make it new'). Where did that will to experiment come from? Why did it so insistently take the forms it took? Looking specifically at Modernism in England, David Trotter seeks answers in the careers of three novelists writing in the first decades of the century: Ford Madox Ford, D. H. Lawrence, and Wyndham Lewis. The context he proposes for their work is that of contemporary understandings of the function and value of expertise, and of the dilemmas peculiar to those possessing it. There is a certain madness about the expert's pursuit of expertise, and about his or her disappointment if expertise fails to yield adequate social recognition. The early psychiatric literature identified this madness as paranoia, and the textbooks and case-histories find an uncanny echo in Modernist fiction. In the obstinacy of their will to experiment, Ford, Lawrence, and Lewis wrote about, and lived, paranoia. To understand that obstinacy in its professional and psychiatric contexts is to approach from a new and unexpected angle the preoccupations with gender and with the politics of culture which currently characterize the study of Modernism. The energies it shook loose in their writing are energies which, evading absorption into the 'postmodern', continue to shape Western society and culture to this day.
... important study ... The sheer sweep of [Trotter's] study is impressive ... His analyses are never less than illuminating ... Trotter's interpretations are invariably stimulating.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
A Brief History of Paranoia
Paranoia, Psychoanalysis, and Cultural Theory
Career Development: William Godwin, Wilkie Collins, and the Psychopathologies of Expertise
Towards an Epidemiology of Paranoid Narrative
One of Whom? Lord Jim and 'Ability in the Abstract'
Ford's Impressionism
The Will-to-Abstraction: Hulme, Lewis, Lawrence
D. H. Lawrence: Women in Love, Men in Madness
Wyndham Lewis's Professions
Beyond Modernism, Beyond Paranoia
Index