Description

Book Synopsis
Explores how late Victorian, Edwardian, and modernist literary texts responded and adapted to institutional change that characterized the emergence of the welfare state, and links the development of the institutional forms of the state to the aesthetic forms of literary writing.

Trade Review
An important contribution to the literary and intellectual history of Britain in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as well as to contemporary debates on critique and post-critique. Focusing on a constellation of thinkers and writers who gave voice to a reformist imaginary, Kohlmann helps us to think about reform and the state anew. A powerful defense of the slow politics of progressive reform informed by aspirations to live otherwise. * Amanda Anderson, Director, Cogut Institute for the Humanities and Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Humanities and English, Brown University *
British Literature and the Life of Institutions is a serious achievement: a genuinely important contribution not only to Victorian and modernist literary studies, but to the wider conversation about literature and critique today. By bringing back into play a much more positive conception of the state's role in our lives than has dominated cultural criticism in recent decades, Kohlmann gives depth and analytic edge to accounts of political reformism, restoring a vocabulary for 'long revolutionary' commitments to a more egalitarian society. Victorian and Edwardian literature look different in the light of his readings; so too does the long arc of argument over the nature and scope of criticism's commitments through the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. * Helen Small, Merton Professor of English Language and Literature, University of Oxford *
An irreplaceable contribution to our understanding of literature and philosophy around 1900--and a model for contemporary scholarship. Meticulously, and with exceptional clarity of view, Kohlmann counters threadbare conceptions of the state as necessarily inflexible, monolithic, and at odds with social life. * Douglas Mao, Russ Family Professor in the Humanities, Johns Hopkins University *
A deeply researched, tightly argued, and immensely valuable study. It stands among the strongest contributions to the growing new institutionalism in literary studies...A fascinating treatment of its subject...Makes a case for the importance of thinking institutions differently in the present: this is as much a work of intellectual history and reclamation as of literary scholarship. * Robert Higney, The City College Of New York *
I can highly recommend British Literature and the Life of Institutions to scholars interested in debates about social reform past and present. * Journal for the Study of British Cultures 30.1 *

Table of Contents
Introduction: Thinking the State (Again) 1: Literature as Speculative Thought: Britain's Long Hegelian Moment, c.1900 2: "The Hope of Pessimism": George Gissing, Mary Ward, and the Idea of an Institution 3: "True Ownership": Edward Carpenter and the Nationalization of Land 4: "Kinetic" Reform: H. G. Wells and Redistributive Taxation 5: Welfare State Romance: E. M. Forster and Unemployment Insurance Coda: Reformist Legacies

British Literature and the Life of Institutions

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    A Hardback by Benjamin Kohlmann

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      View other formats and editions of British Literature and the Life of Institutions by Benjamin Kohlmann

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 30/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9780198836179, 978-0198836179
      ISBN10: 0198836171

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Explores how late Victorian, Edwardian, and modernist literary texts responded and adapted to institutional change that characterized the emergence of the welfare state, and links the development of the institutional forms of the state to the aesthetic forms of literary writing.

      Trade Review
      An important contribution to the literary and intellectual history of Britain in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as well as to contemporary debates on critique and post-critique. Focusing on a constellation of thinkers and writers who gave voice to a reformist imaginary, Kohlmann helps us to think about reform and the state anew. A powerful defense of the slow politics of progressive reform informed by aspirations to live otherwise. * Amanda Anderson, Director, Cogut Institute for the Humanities and Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Humanities and English, Brown University *
      British Literature and the Life of Institutions is a serious achievement: a genuinely important contribution not only to Victorian and modernist literary studies, but to the wider conversation about literature and critique today. By bringing back into play a much more positive conception of the state's role in our lives than has dominated cultural criticism in recent decades, Kohlmann gives depth and analytic edge to accounts of political reformism, restoring a vocabulary for 'long revolutionary' commitments to a more egalitarian society. Victorian and Edwardian literature look different in the light of his readings; so too does the long arc of argument over the nature and scope of criticism's commitments through the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. * Helen Small, Merton Professor of English Language and Literature, University of Oxford *
      An irreplaceable contribution to our understanding of literature and philosophy around 1900--and a model for contemporary scholarship. Meticulously, and with exceptional clarity of view, Kohlmann counters threadbare conceptions of the state as necessarily inflexible, monolithic, and at odds with social life. * Douglas Mao, Russ Family Professor in the Humanities, Johns Hopkins University *
      A deeply researched, tightly argued, and immensely valuable study. It stands among the strongest contributions to the growing new institutionalism in literary studies...A fascinating treatment of its subject...Makes a case for the importance of thinking institutions differently in the present: this is as much a work of intellectual history and reclamation as of literary scholarship. * Robert Higney, The City College Of New York *
      I can highly recommend British Literature and the Life of Institutions to scholars interested in debates about social reform past and present. * Journal for the Study of British Cultures 30.1 *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Thinking the State (Again) 1: Literature as Speculative Thought: Britain's Long Hegelian Moment, c.1900 2: "The Hope of Pessimism": George Gissing, Mary Ward, and the Idea of an Institution 3: "True Ownership": Edward Carpenter and the Nationalization of Land 4: "Kinetic" Reform: H. G. Wells and Redistributive Taxation 5: Welfare State Romance: E. M. Forster and Unemployment Insurance Coda: Reformist Legacies

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