ABSTRACT

Beginning with Somerset Maugham’s innovative, sexually dissident South Seas novel and tales and Alfred Hitchcock’s gay-inflected revisiting of the Jack the Ripper sensation in silent film, this book considers the continuing presence of the past in future-oriented work of the 1930s and the Second World War by Sylvia Townsend Warner, Virginia Woolf, George Orwell, and the playwright and novelist, Patrick Hamilton. The final three chapters carry the discussion to the present in analyses of works by lesbian, postcolonial, and gay authors such as Sarah Waters, Amitav Ghosh, and Alan Hollinghurst. Focusing on questions about temporality and changes in gender and sexuality, especially gay and lesbian, straight and queer, following the rejection of the Victorian patriarchal marriage model, this study examines the continuing influence of late Victorian Aestheticist and Decadent culture in Modernist writing and its permutations in England.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|24 pages

Modernity and Degeneration in Somerset Maugham and Paul Gauguin

The Moon and Sixpence and the South Sea Tales

chapter 2|19 pages

Haunting the West End

Oscar Wilde and Silent Hitchcock

chapter 4|30 pages

Pathological Legacies

Patriarchy in Virginia Woolf, Lytton Strachey, and John Maynard Keynes

chapter 5|23 pages

“A New Space of Time”

Determining the Future in The Years