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Back to the Future: Late Modernism in J.G. Ballard's The Drowned World
by
Robert S. Lehman
in
Aesthetics
/ Allegory
/ Alligators
/ Allusion
/ Ambiguity
/ American literature
/ Ballard, J G (1930-2009)
/ Ballard, J.G
/ British & Irish literature
/ Criticism and interpretation
/ English literature
/ Essays
/ European culture
/ Hegemony
/ History
/ Ideology
/ Literary canon
/ Literary characters
/ Literary criticism
/ Literary devices
/ Literature
/ Logic
/ Memory
/ Modernism
/ Modernism (Literature)
/ Modernist detours
/ Novelists
/ Novels
/ Science fiction & fantasy
/ Short stories
/ Sterling, Bruce
/ Terminology
/ Works
2018
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Back to the Future: Late Modernism in J.G. Ballard's The Drowned World
by
Robert S. Lehman
in
Aesthetics
/ Allegory
/ Alligators
/ Allusion
/ Ambiguity
/ American literature
/ Ballard, J G (1930-2009)
/ Ballard, J.G
/ British & Irish literature
/ Criticism and interpretation
/ English literature
/ Essays
/ European culture
/ Hegemony
/ History
/ Ideology
/ Literary canon
/ Literary characters
/ Literary criticism
/ Literary devices
/ Literature
/ Logic
/ Memory
/ Modernism
/ Modernism (Literature)
/ Modernist detours
/ Novelists
/ Novels
/ Science fiction & fantasy
/ Short stories
/ Sterling, Bruce
/ Terminology
/ Works
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Back to the Future: Late Modernism in J.G. Ballard's The Drowned World
by
Robert S. Lehman
in
Aesthetics
/ Allegory
/ Alligators
/ Allusion
/ Ambiguity
/ American literature
/ Ballard, J G (1930-2009)
/ Ballard, J.G
/ British & Irish literature
/ Criticism and interpretation
/ English literature
/ Essays
/ European culture
/ Hegemony
/ History
/ Ideology
/ Literary canon
/ Literary characters
/ Literary criticism
/ Literary devices
/ Literature
/ Logic
/ Memory
/ Modernism
/ Modernism (Literature)
/ Modernist detours
/ Novelists
/ Novels
/ Science fiction & fantasy
/ Short stories
/ Sterling, Bruce
/ Terminology
/ Works
2018
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Back to the Future: Late Modernism in J.G. Ballard's The Drowned World
Journal Article
Back to the Future: Late Modernism in J.G. Ballard's The Drowned World
2018
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Overview
J. G. Ballard's second novel, The Drowned World (1962), addresses itself to modernism not, as is typical of what has come to be associated with works late modernism, by intensifying modernism's autotelic dimension—its “surrender to the resistance of its medium” (in Greenberg's terminology) or its “impoverishment” (in Beckett's)—but by producing a Haeckelian recapitulation of modernism that is also a diagnosis, after the fact, of modernism's constitutive impossibility. For at least as it appears in Ballard's novel, modernism describes not only a particular moment in the history of European culture or a particular artistic canon but also, and more radically, a ground clearing, a forgetting of the past that is hostile to the production of lasting literary works—is hostile, finally, to modernism itself. A late modernist repetition of modernism, then, The Drowned World provides a unique perspective on the death and afterlife of the modernist project.
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