E.M. Forster's ModernismThis volume is a comprehensive investigation into Forster's relationship to Modernism. It advances the argument that Forster's fiction embodies an important strand within modernism and in doing so makes the case for a new definition and interpretation of "modernism". |
Contents
Romantic Realism | 63 |
The Debate about Form | 98 |
The Manuscripts of A Passage to India | 159 |
Forster and Modernism | 183 |
References | 200 |
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Abinger edition Adela aesthetic Arctic Summer Aspects attempt Aziz beauty becomes Bloomsbury characters comic context creed critical cultural described E. M. Forster echo Edward Arnold Edwardian Edwardian period elements England English escape eternal eternal moment experience fact failure fiction Fielding Fielding's Forster G. E. Moore Godbole Gokul Ashtami Gokul Ashtami festival Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson Helen Hinduism Hobhouse Hobson Howards End humanistic idea ideal imperial implies instance kind Leonard Bast liberal-humanism liberal-humanist liberalism and humanism London Longest Journey Lubbock Marabar Caves Margaret marriage Masterman 1911 meaning mode modernist Moore Moore's narrative voice never notion novelist Passage to India polemic political possible present prophetic quest recognition relations represent response rhythm rhythmic Rickie romantic realism romanticism satirised Schlegels seems seen sense significant snakes social society spirit suggests symbolism symbolist tendency things tion tradition truth wasp Wilcox Woolf words writing