Description: A study of cross-generational literary networks in interwar Britain that investigates how writers emerging in the 1930s from the shadow of their older modernist contemporaries such as E. M. Forster, T. S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf, ended up shaping their public engagement.
Brief description:
Bárbara Gallego Larrarte is an Early Career Research Fellow at the Institute of English Studies, University of London, UK.
Review Quotes: "Intergenerational Modernism redraws the map of the interwar period and changes the way we think about canonical modernist writers." --Scott McCracken, Professor of Twentieth-Century Literature, Queen Mary University of London, UK