Description

Book Synopsis

From Orientalism to Cultural Capital presents a fascinating account of the wave of Russophilia that pervaded British literary culture in the early twentieth century. The authors bring a new approach to the study of this period, exploring the literary phenomenon through two theoretical models from the social sciences: Orientalism and the notion of «cultural capital» associated with Pierre Bourdieu. Examining the responses of leading literary practitioners who had a significant impact on the institutional transmission of Russian culture, they reassess the mechanics of cultural dialogism, mediation and exchange, casting new light on British perceptions of modernism as a transcultural artistic movement and the ways in which the literary interaction with the myth of Russia shaped and intensified these cultural views.



Trade Review
«From Orientalism to Cultural Capital: The Myth of Russia in British Literature of the 1920s supplies an informative, theoretically and historically grounded account of how the British perceptions of Russia were shaped by some of the most prominent British writers of the early twentieth century [...].»
(Maxim Shadurski, The Wellsian: The Journal of the H. G. Wells Society 40/2017)

Table of Contents

CONTENTS: Philip Ross Bullock: Preface – The East Wind of Russianness – John Galsworthy: Is It Possible to «De-Anglicise the Englishman»? – H. G. Wells: Interpreting the «Writing on the Eastern Wall of Europe» – J. M. Barrie and The Truth about the Russian Dancers – D. H. Lawrence: «Russia Will Certainly Inherit the Future» – «Lappin and Lapinova»: Woolf’s Beleaguered Russian Monarchs – «Not a Story of Detection, of Crime and Punishment, but of Sin and Expiation»: T. S. Eliot’s Debt to Russia, Dostoevsky and Turgenev.

From Orientalism to Cultural Capital: The Myth of

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    A Paperback / softback by Angus Wrenn, Angus Wrenn

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      View other formats and editions of From Orientalism to Cultural Capital: The Myth of by Angus Wrenn

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 03/04/2017
      ISBN13: 9783034322034, 978-3034322034
      ISBN10: 3034322038

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      From Orientalism to Cultural Capital presents a fascinating account of the wave of Russophilia that pervaded British literary culture in the early twentieth century. The authors bring a new approach to the study of this period, exploring the literary phenomenon through two theoretical models from the social sciences: Orientalism and the notion of «cultural capital» associated with Pierre Bourdieu. Examining the responses of leading literary practitioners who had a significant impact on the institutional transmission of Russian culture, they reassess the mechanics of cultural dialogism, mediation and exchange, casting new light on British perceptions of modernism as a transcultural artistic movement and the ways in which the literary interaction with the myth of Russia shaped and intensified these cultural views.



      Trade Review
      «From Orientalism to Cultural Capital: The Myth of Russia in British Literature of the 1920s supplies an informative, theoretically and historically grounded account of how the British perceptions of Russia were shaped by some of the most prominent British writers of the early twentieth century [...].»
      (Maxim Shadurski, The Wellsian: The Journal of the H. G. Wells Society 40/2017)

      Table of Contents

      CONTENTS: Philip Ross Bullock: Preface – The East Wind of Russianness – John Galsworthy: Is It Possible to «De-Anglicise the Englishman»? – H. G. Wells: Interpreting the «Writing on the Eastern Wall of Europe» – J. M. Barrie and The Truth about the Russian Dancers – D. H. Lawrence: «Russia Will Certainly Inherit the Future» – «Lappin and Lapinova»: Woolf’s Beleaguered Russian Monarchs – «Not a Story of Detection, of Crime and Punishment, but of Sin and Expiation»: T. S. Eliot’s Debt to Russia, Dostoevsky and Turgenev.

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