Decadent Catholicism and the Making of Modernism at Meripustak

Decadent Catholicism and the Making of Modernism

Books from same Author: Martin Lockerd

Books from same Publisher: Bloomsbury

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Martin Lockerd
    PublisherBloomsbury
    ISBN9781350137653
    Pages248
    BindingHardcover
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearJuly 2020

    Description

    Bloomsbury Decadent Catholicism and the Making of Modernism by Martin Lockerd

    Tracing the movement of literary decadence from the writers of the fin de siècle - Oscar Wilde, Aubrey Beardsley, Ernest Dowson, and Lionel Johnson - to the modernist writers of the following generation, this book charts the legacy of decadent Catholicism in the fiction and poetry of British and Irish modernists. Linking the later writers with their literary predecessors, Martin Lockerd examines the shifts in representation of Catholic decadence in the works of W. B. Yeats through Ezra Pound to T.S. Eliot; the adoption and transformation of anti-Catholicism in Irish writers George Moore and James Joyce; the Catholic literary revival as portrayed in Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited; and the attraction to decadent Catholicism still felt by postmodernist writers D.B.C. Pierre and Alan Hollinghurst.Drawing on new archival research, this study revisits some of the central works of modernist literature and undermines existing myths of modernist newness and secularism to supplant them with a record of spiritual turmoil, metaphysical uncertainty, and a project of cultural subversion that paradoxically relied upon the institutional bulwark of European Christianity. Lockerd explores the aesthetic, sexual, and political implications of the relationship between decadent art and Catholicism as it found a new voice in the works of iconoclastic modernist writers.