ABSTRACT

First Published in 1993. Written specifically for students and assuming no prior knowledge of the subject, David Trotter’s The English Novel in History 1895-1920 provides the first detailed and fully comprehensive analysis of early twentieth-century English fiction. Whereas all previous studies have been rigorously selective, Trotter looks at over 140 novelists across the whole spectrum of fiction: from the innovations of Joyce’s Ulysses through to popular mass-market genres such as detective stories and spy-thrillers. By examining the novels in both stylistic and historical terms, David Trotter looks at the ways in which writers responded to contemporary preoccupations such as the spectacle of consumption and the growth of suburbia, or to anxieties about the decline of Empire, racial ‘degeneration’ and ‘sexual anarchy’. He also challenges the view that literature of the period can be interpreted as a neat procession from realism to Modernism.

chapter I|99 pages

Economies and Styles

chapter 1|16 pages

Consuming Passions

chapter 2|22 pages

Labour

chapter 3|13 pages

Gold Standards

chapter 4|18 pages

Thresholds

chapter 5|15 pages

Interiors

chapter 6|13 pages

The Relevance of Ulysses

chapter II|85 pages

Nation and Society

chapter 7|17 pages

Degeneration

chapter 8|14 pages

Declension

chapter 8|12 pages

Frontiers

chapter 10|13 pages

Englishness

chapter 11|14 pages

Spies

chapter 12|13 pages

Awakenings

part III|109 pages

The Psychopathology of Modernism

chapter 13|17 pages

Sex Novels

chapter 14|16 pages

Disgust

chapter 15|15 pages

Henry James's Odd Women

chapter 16|15 pages

Irony and Revulsion in Kipling and Conrad

chapter 17|17 pages

Waiting: James's Last Novels

chapter 18|13 pages

Wyndham Lewis

chapter 19|14 pages

Stephen Hero and Bloom the Obscure