

An edition of Expert modernists, matricide, and modern culture (2004)
Woolf, Forster, Joyce
By Lois Cucullu
Publish Date
2004
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Language
eng
Pages
233
Description:
"Through an original reading of the importance of women to modernism, this study shows what modernism begins to look like once we consider Virginia Woolf exemplary instead of the female exception to modernist rule. Linking the leading innovators of modernism - Woolf, Forster, Joyce - to the cult of the modern expert, Cucullu shows how the three expert practitioners used technical innovations in the novel to replace reigning Victorian beliefs about marriage, procreation and the family. Modernists of whatever gender stripe gained in cultural authority by denigrating and replacing the moral authority of 'woman', as defined by Victorian society, with their own expert narratives more synchronous with a mobile and worldy aggregate. In the process, modernist innovations became the basis of a new expert authority and the measure of a modern cultural class, as cultural reproduction assumed the centrality once accorded biological reproduction and the bourgeois family."--BOOK JACKET.
subjects: Characters, English fiction, Family in literature, History and criticism, Home in literature, Matriarchy in literature, Modernism (Literature), Mothers in literature, Women, Women in literature, Families in literature, English fiction, history and criticism, 20th century, Characters--womenwoolf, virginia , 1882-1941, Characters--womenforster, e. m. (edward morgan) , 1879-1970, Characters--womenjoyce, james , 1882-1941, English fiction--history and criticism, English fiction--20th century--history and criticism, Modernism (literature)--great britain, Pr888.w6 c83 2004, 823/.912093522
People: E. M. Forster (1879-1970), James Joyce (1882-1941), Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)
Places: Great Britain
Times: 20th century