The Attempt at Objectivity”: Modernism in Wyndham Lewis’S Popular Autobiography
Dmitriy Tulyakov ()
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Dmitriy Tulyakov: National Research University Higher School of Economics
HSE Working papers from National Research University Higher School of Economics
Abstract:
This article considers Wyndham Lewis’s autobiography Blasting and Bombardiering (1937) as an instrument for reassessing modernism and representing it to the wider readership of popular literature. Lewis’s employment of autobiography to conceptualise modernism and position himself within/towards it is a marked step away from his criticism where modern subjectivity, historical approach to the self, and fictionalisation of autobiography are repudiated. Such change cannot be explained only by Lewis’s pragmatic motives of raising his profile in the recent literary history and making money by catering to the audience’s taste for autobiographies. This choice of genre also reflects Lewis’s disillusionment with transformative yet detached modernism, which the First World War proved to have been utopian, but with whose aesthetic standards Lewis wanted to maintain association. In this context, the populist intent of the autobiography can be seen as a means of rethinking the failed modernist attempt at objectivity. With the help of the form of popular autobiography, Lewis playfully subjects to detachment modernism itself, undermining the assumptions of its commitment to difficulty, elitism, and autonomy and highlighting the related tensions within his own aesthetics
Keywords: modernist autobiography; Wyndham Lewis; detachment; popular literature (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Z (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 20 pages
Date: 2015
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-his
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Published in WP BRP Series: Literary Studies / LS, February 2015, pages 1-20
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hig:wpaper:13/ls/2015
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