Description

Book Synopsis
Examines late modernism’s decisive turn toward everyday life, locating in the heightened scrutiny of details, textures, and experiences an intimate attempt to conceptualize geopolitical disorder.

Trade Review
The Extinct Scene encourages us to see how British intellectuals, metropolitan and colonial, registered the impact of world-historical events-especially the Second World War and the collapse of the British Empire-through depictions of the everyday. With fresh readings of canonical writers and suggestive interpretations of less widely studied figures, this book offers a smart and timely contribution to the ongoing reevaluation of midcentury modernism. -- Peter Kalliney, University of Kentucky The Extinct Scene is a superb conceptual and historical contribution to twentieth-century literary studies, treating the period of geopolitical crisis between World War I and World War II. Thomas S. Davis rethinks the legacies of avant-gardism and modernism in Britain in the wake of World War I, tracing an 'outward turn' that enfolds modernist techniques into realist forms. With astute readings of texts and films that focus on everyday scenes and objects-amid bombed landscapes and under the specter of another war-Davis also considers how these aesthetics reflect authors' investments in state-rebuilding projects or in nationalist sentiment. Drawing deftly on critical theory, The Extinct Scene also develops an exemplary method for interpreting literature and authorship in its geopolitical context. -- Laura Doyle, University of Massachusetts The Extinct Scene opens up a new trove of modernist genres that gave literary form to the world-systemic transitions of the mid-twentieth century. Davis's insistence on the geopolitical rather than the global as the frame of reference for experimental writing makes this book more conceptually rigorous and politically current than other works in transnational modernisms. An entirely convincing account of the period, as deft in its fine-grained readings as it is inspiring in its theoretical ambition. -- Jed Esty, author of Unseasonable Youth: Modernism, Colonialism, and the Fiction of Development [An] impressive study... [Davis] provides fresh insights into a period already intensely studied, offering new and wide-ranging interpretations... Recommended. Choice A brilliant and timely book... [The Extinct Scene] combines theoretical sophistication with historical detail to produce finely grained readings. -- Allan Hepburn Modernism / modernity [A] brilliant book... Davis brings a new level of archival density and diversity - from Mass-Observation to the Windrush generation - to bear on conversations about Modernism and the way we relate global events to the developing variety and social agility of aesthetic form throughout this convulsive era. -- David James Times Literary Supplement

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction: Late Modernism and the Outward Turn 1. The Last Snapshot of the British Intelligentsia: Documentary, Mass-Observation, and the Fate of the Liberal Avant-Garde 2. The Historical Novel at History's End 3. Late Modernism's Geopolitical Imagination: Everyday Life in the Global Hot Zones 4. War Gothic 5. "It is de age of colonial concern": Vernacular Fictions and Political Belonging Epilogue: "Appointments to keep in the past" Notes Bibliography Index

The Extinct Scene Late Modernism and Everyday

Product form

£44.00

Includes FREE delivery

RRP £55.00 – you save £11.00 (20%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Thomas Davis

1 in stock


    View other formats and editions of The Extinct Scene Late Modernism and Everyday by Thomas Davis

    Publisher: Columbia University Press
    Publication Date: 08/12/2015
    ISBN13: 9780231169424, 978-0231169424
    ISBN10: 0231169426

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Examines late modernism’s decisive turn toward everyday life, locating in the heightened scrutiny of details, textures, and experiences an intimate attempt to conceptualize geopolitical disorder.

    Trade Review
    The Extinct Scene encourages us to see how British intellectuals, metropolitan and colonial, registered the impact of world-historical events-especially the Second World War and the collapse of the British Empire-through depictions of the everyday. With fresh readings of canonical writers and suggestive interpretations of less widely studied figures, this book offers a smart and timely contribution to the ongoing reevaluation of midcentury modernism. -- Peter Kalliney, University of Kentucky The Extinct Scene is a superb conceptual and historical contribution to twentieth-century literary studies, treating the period of geopolitical crisis between World War I and World War II. Thomas S. Davis rethinks the legacies of avant-gardism and modernism in Britain in the wake of World War I, tracing an 'outward turn' that enfolds modernist techniques into realist forms. With astute readings of texts and films that focus on everyday scenes and objects-amid bombed landscapes and under the specter of another war-Davis also considers how these aesthetics reflect authors' investments in state-rebuilding projects or in nationalist sentiment. Drawing deftly on critical theory, The Extinct Scene also develops an exemplary method for interpreting literature and authorship in its geopolitical context. -- Laura Doyle, University of Massachusetts The Extinct Scene opens up a new trove of modernist genres that gave literary form to the world-systemic transitions of the mid-twentieth century. Davis's insistence on the geopolitical rather than the global as the frame of reference for experimental writing makes this book more conceptually rigorous and politically current than other works in transnational modernisms. An entirely convincing account of the period, as deft in its fine-grained readings as it is inspiring in its theoretical ambition. -- Jed Esty, author of Unseasonable Youth: Modernism, Colonialism, and the Fiction of Development [An] impressive study... [Davis] provides fresh insights into a period already intensely studied, offering new and wide-ranging interpretations... Recommended. Choice A brilliant and timely book... [The Extinct Scene] combines theoretical sophistication with historical detail to produce finely grained readings. -- Allan Hepburn Modernism / modernity [A] brilliant book... Davis brings a new level of archival density and diversity - from Mass-Observation to the Windrush generation - to bear on conversations about Modernism and the way we relate global events to the developing variety and social agility of aesthetic form throughout this convulsive era. -- David James Times Literary Supplement

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments Introduction: Late Modernism and the Outward Turn 1. The Last Snapshot of the British Intelligentsia: Documentary, Mass-Observation, and the Fate of the Liberal Avant-Garde 2. The Historical Novel at History's End 3. Late Modernism's Geopolitical Imagination: Everyday Life in the Global Hot Zones 4. War Gothic 5. "It is de age of colonial concern": Vernacular Fictions and Political Belonging Epilogue: "Appointments to keep in the past" Notes Bibliography Index

    Recently viewed products

    © 2025 Book Curl

      • American Express
      • Apple Pay
      • Diners Club
      • Discover
      • Google Pay
      • Maestro
      • Mastercard
      • PayPal
      • Shop Pay
      • Union Pay
      • Visa

      Login

      Forgot your password?

      Don't have an account yet?
      Create account