Imagining Yugoslavia in Mid-Century British and Irish Writing
Sorozatcím: Oxford Mid-Century Studies Series;
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A termék adatai:
- Kiadó OUP Oxford
- Megjelenés dátuma 2026. január 9.
- ISBN 9780198973423
- Kötéstípus Keménykötés
- Terjedelem320 oldal
- Méret 240x165x25 mm
- Súly 631 g
- Nyelv angol 669
Kategóriák
Rövid leírás:
Imagining Yugoslavia in Mid-Century British and Irish Writing is the first dedicated study of British and Irish cultural engagement with Yugoslavia in the 1940s and 50s, exploring a range of art forms and genres, including novels, film, war journalism, and travel writing, and addressing major authors such as Rebecca West and Louis MacNeice.
TöbbHosszú leírás:
During the Second World War, Britain was both strategically and imaginatively invested in Yugoslavia. The Balkan state was celebrated and idealized in home front propaganda as a site of resistance, a locus of spirituality, and then as a brave communist experiment containing the promise of utopia. After the war, many hailed Tito's Yugoslavia as an exceptional socialist society steering a course between the extremes of western free-market capitalism and Soviet repression, while others cursed the regime as totalitarian, or mourned the loss of a picturesque Ruritanian kingdom to a communist regime. From the BBC to Ealing Studios, from special operations memoirs to Cold War travelogues, this book explores and interrogates a peculiar fascination with Yugoslavia in mid-twentieth-century British and Irish literature and culture.
Exploring representations of Yugoslavia in print, over the airwaves and on screen, it examines how and why many of the key British and Irish writers of the era became drawn into military and political debates around the fate of the country. The cast of characters is extensive and colourful, and includes Rebecca West, author of the colossal modernist travelogue Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1941), the broadcaster and dramatist Denis Johnston, the poet and radio dramatist Louis MacNeice, novelists Lawrence Durrell and Anthony Powell, the historian E. P. Thompson, essayist Hubert Butler, special operations agent turned Conservative MP Fitzroy Maclean, and the Labour politicians Nye Bevan and Barbara Castle. Projections of other countries reveal much about culture and politics closer to home: by tracing the various roles played by this now-extinct Balkan state in the cultural imaginations of the declining imperial metropole and its former colony, this new cultural history illuminates forgotten lines of transmission between north-west and south-east Europe.
Drawing on extensive archival research, Imagining Yugoslavia in Mid-Century British and Irish Writing is the first dedicated study of British and Irish cultural engagement with Yugoslavia in this period and makes a serious contribution to the cultural and intellectual history of the Second World War and Cold War.
Tartalomjegyzék:
Introduction: 'This is Europe'
Saluting Yugoslavia: Rebecca West, Louis MacNeice, and British Wartime Propaganda
Chetniks in Ealing: The Making of Undercover
'These people know what they're fighting for': Denis Johnston Meets the Partisans
Lawrence of Yugoslavia: Imperial Adventures in Wartime Europe
The Federal People's Republic of Ruritania
'a book that could be helpful to us all': Post-War Travellers in Yugoslavia
Afterword