Modernisms Seminar Schedule 23-24
Modernisms Seminar Schedule 23-24
Modernisms Seminar Schedule 23-24
ENGL60451
Course tutors: Robert Spencer (RS), Chris Vardy (CV) and Daniela Caselli (DC)
• On Blackboard: Virginia Woolf, ‘The Decay of Essay writing’; ‘Modern Fiction’; ‘Mr Bennett
and Mrs Brown’; ‘Women and Fiction’, from Virginia Woolf, Selected Essays (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2008)
• On Blackboard: Raymond Williams, ‘When Was Modernism?’ Culture and Politics: Class,
Writing, Socialism, ed. Phil O’Brien (1987; London: Verso, 2022), pp. 203-220
• On Blackboard: Douglas Mao, ‘Introduction: The New Modernist Studies’, The New Modernist
Studies, ed. Douglas Mao (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021), pp. 1-22
• On Blackboard: Declan Kiberd, ‘How Ulysses Didn’t change Our Lives’ and ‘How It Might
Still Do’, from ‘Ulysses’ and Us: The Art of Everyday Living, London: Faber & Faber, 2010, pp.
315 & 16-31
• On Blackboard: Vicki Mahaffey, “Nausicaa”, The Cambridge Centenary Ulysses, ed. Catherine
Flynn, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022, pp. 473-83
• On Blackboard: Ronan Crowley, “Circe”, The Cambridge Centenary Ulysses, ed. Catherine
Flynn, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022, pp. 572-81
• On Blackboard: Jeri Johnson, ‘Joyce and Feminism’, The Cambridge Companion to James Joyce,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004, pp. 196-212
WEEK FOUR (DC) ‘From the only poet’: whiteness and sex work in Samuel Beckett’s
early poetry*
* N.B. some of the titles of the poetry and essays analysed use offensive language. The work,
however, critiques racism and misogyny in ways that we will explore together.
• On Blackboard: Samuel Beckett, ‘From the Only Poet to a Shining Whore’ and ‘To Be Sung
Aloud’ in Collected Poems, ed. by Seán Lawlor and John Pilling (London, Faber & Faber, 2012).
Reproduced from Henry Crowder, Henry Music: Poems by Nancy Cunard, Harold Acton, Richard
Aldington, Walter Lowenfels, Samuel Beckett (Paris: The Hours Press, 1930)
• On Blackboard (original folio in the John Rylands): Henry Crevel, ‘The Negress in the Brothel’
in Nancy Cunard (ed), Negro Anthology (London: Wishart &Co, 1934)
• On Blackboard: Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt, ‘Footsteps of Red Ink: Body and Landscape in Lolly
Willowes’, Twentieth-Century Literature, 49:4 (2003), 449-71
• On Blackboard: Short excerpts from Gay Wachman’s Lesbian Empire: Radical Crosswriting in
the Twenties (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2001); Ronald Hutton, Pagan Britain
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015); Diane Purkiss, The Witch in History: Early Modern
and Twentieth-Century Representations (London: Routledge, 1996)
• On Blackboard: Urmila Seshagiri, ‘Modernist Ashes, Postcolonial Phoenix: Jean Rhys and the
Evolution of the English Novel in the Twentieth Century’, Modernism/modernity, 13.3 (2006),
487-505
• On Blackboard: Anne Cunningham, ‘“Get on or get out”: failure and negative femininity in
Jean Rhys’s Voyage in the Dark’, Modern Fiction Studies, 59.2 (2013), 373-394
WEEK TEN (DC) Modernism and realism II: experimentalism and sexual candour
Winifred Holtby, South Riding: An English Landscape, with a preface by Shirley Williams, an
Introduction by Marion Shaw, and an Epitaph by Vera Brittain (1936; London: Virago, 2010)
• On Blackboard: Kate Millett, Sexual Politics (Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1970).
(excerpts)
• On Blackboard: Winifred Holtby, Virginia Woolf: a critical memoir [1932] (Chicago: Cassandra
edition, 1978) (excerpts)
• On Blackboard: Lisa Stead, ‘“The big romance”: Winifred Holtby and the Fictionalisation of
Women’s Cinemagoing in Interwar Yorkshire’, Women’s History Review, 22:5 (Spring 2013),
759-776.
WEEK ELEVEN (CV) Minimalism, abstraction and sexuality: Samuel Beckett’s Post War
Short Prose
Samuel Beckett, The Complete Short Prose, 1929-1989, ed. by S. E. Gontarski (New York: Grove Press,
1995). We will focus on: All Strange Away, Imagination Dead Imagine, and Enough.
• On Blackboard: David Cunningham, ‘“We have our being in justice”: Formalism, Abstraction
and Beckett’s “Ethics”’, in Russell Smith (ed.), Beckett and Ethics (London and New York:
Continuum, 2008), pp. 21–37.
• On Blackboard: Laura Salisbury Samuel Beckett: Laughing Matters, Comic Timing (Edinburgh:
Edinburgh University Press, 2012). (excerpts)
This session will provide a chance to discuss your essay plans with the group. We will also review the
themes and questions we have been discussing together on the course.