Acknowledgments
Editorial Preface to Historicizing Modernism
Introduction
1. W.H. Auden: Pedagogy and Freedom of Choice in the 1930s
2. Winifred Holtby, Vera Brittain and the Politics of Pedagogy in
South Riding, Honourable Estate and Testament of Youth
3. Writers of The Old School: Graham Greene, Walter Greenwood,
Stephen Spender, Antonia White and Arthur Calder-Marshall
4. 'Altering the structure of society': Virginia Woolf's
Class-Critique of Educational Institutions in the 1930s
5. 'Making Him Our Master': The Eton writers George Orwell, Cyril
Connolly and Henry Green
Coda
Bibliography
Index
Explores the politics of British writers of the 1930s, from Virginia Woolf to W.H. Auden, through their writings on class, politics and education.
Natasha Periyan is a Research Associate at the University of Kent, UK.
The work is a cogent and convincing assessment of numerous
responses to education in the literature of the 1930s, but the
argument resists the temptation to generalize ...The
characterization of the writers resonates often with Woolf’s “The
Leaning Tower,” but the methodology allows readers to spark their
own fires from the friction of the commentaries on related texts,
legislation, letters, etc.: an instance of an individualist
educative technique in itself, perhaps.
*Modernism/modernity*
An excellent contribution to a well-established tradition of
feminist scholarship on writers of both sexes in the 1930s ...
Periyan is attentive to the relationship between literary style and
politics, and her analysis of the textual variations in the 1935,
1939, and 1955 versions of Stephen Spender’s ‘An Elementary School
Classroom’ in relation to working-class agency, reform, revolution,
and the impersonal forces of history is accomplished.
*The Review of English Studies*
One of the most refreshing aspects of this study is how its
thematic approach leads Periyan to read across writers usually
separated into factions according to their "generation" or
categorization by critics as middlebrow or modernist ...
Extensively researched ... A valuable addition to the body of
criticism on 1930s British literature.
*Journal of British Studies*
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