English Literature in the 1960s soon threw off its post-war weariness
and the tepid influences of the previous decade. New voices, new
visions, and new commitments profoundly reshaped writing during the
60s, and throughout the rest of the century. Drama thrived on its
rapidly rebuilt foundations. New freedoms of style and form
revitalised fiction. Poetry, too, gradually recovered the variety and
inventiveness of earlier years. As well as comprehensively charting
these changes in the literary field, Randall Stevenson persuasively
pinpoints their origins in the historical, social, and intellectual
pressures of the times. Literary developments are revealingly related
to the wider evolution and profound changes in English experience in
the late twentieth-century to shadows of war and loss of empire;
declining influences of class; shifting relations between the genders;
emergent minority and counter-cultures; and the broadening
democratization of contemporary life in general. Analyses of the rise
of literary theory, of publishing and the book trade, and of the
pervasive influences of modernism and postmodernism contribute further
to an impressively thorough, insightful description of writing in the
later twentieth-century a literary period Stevenson shows to be far
more imaginative and exciting than has yet been recognised. Lucid,
accessible, and engaging, this volume of the Oxford English Literary
History presents a unique illumination of its age - one we have lived
through, but are only just beginning to understand. The first full
account of its period, it will set the agenda for discussion of late
twentieth-century literature for many years to come.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191588846
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
OUP Oxford
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter