30 December 2023

1922, the birth year of literary modernism - Woolf, Eliot, Forster, Lawrence

1922 was the birth year of literary modernism!

TS Eliot, Virginia Woolf and Vivien Eliot
The Guardian

The World Broke in Two: the Year That Changed Literature  (Deckle Edge, 2017) by Bill Goldstein wanted to cover the intellectual achieve­ments and personal dramas events in the life four now famous British writers, Virginia Woolf, Thomas Stearns Eliot, Edward Morgan Forster and David Herbert Lawrence, throughout 1922. These four writers were not unknown at that stage but every­thing was chang­ing, perhaps unpredictably. This was the year that James Joyce’s Ulysses and Proust’s In Search of Lost Time hit the public’s attention and shocked them. In fact Proust had a vast impact on Virginia Woolf and EM Forster!

It must have been a productive year in which Woolf started one of my favourite novels Mrs Dalloway and Forster started one of my very favourite novels. A Passage to India. Lawrence wrote Kangaroo, his biographical Australian novel, and Eliot wrote his very well respected The Waste Land.

Yet I faced the Goldstein book with some concern. If 1922 ushered in a new style of English modernist lit­erature, would that down­play the value of my loved Victorian & Edwardian Liter­ature? What if Goldstein analysed and glorified The Rise of Modernism? As NPR explained beautifully Goldstein neatly avoided a dutiful chronicling of anything so weighty. He cleverly sacrificed historical sweep and gravitas for some­thing much more grounded, intimate, and even rude.

It certainly was a year of new and exciting literature, but I am not sure we would describe it as the invention of literary modernism. Bill Goldstein called them literary geniuses, gen­iuses with interconnecting lives. Woolf, Forster and Eliot all lived in London and socialised to some extent with each other. And the Woolfs lived in London, until they moved in 1919 to East Sussex.

These writers should ev­oke in us “nostalgia for a time when precision and introspection were the guiding principles of literature”. One reviewer said the book “captured a seismic moment of cultural rupture that, despite its shock and awe, left something new and exciting in its path” (BookPage).

No, there is neither shock nor awe but there were great ex­cerpts from their own correspondence and their own diaries. So often their words were witty, gossipy and often critical.  And not just their own diaries. Read the correspondence of poor Freida Lawrence who struggled to live with her thought­less, self-absorbed husband.

The problem for me is that 1922 was a huge year in world history. The War To End All Wars had ended in tragedy, young men were dead or wounded, Versailles Peace Treaty created economic catastrophes, Gandhi was arrested in Bombay for sedition and given a long gaol sentence, and Joseph Stalin became General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet Union's Communist Party.

The World Broke in Two 
by Bill Goldstein

It’s in not that I do not want to know the inspirations, self-doubts, financial strug­gles, love affairs, mental illness and personal rivalries between four important individ­uals. What I really needed was important historical context. However I have to ack­nowledge that the terrible influenza epidemic that swept Brit­ain in 1922 had a very real and personal impact on our writers.

My longest blog posts are 1000 words and my lecture notes end at the end of each 75 minute session. So I cannot say I know anything about the creative process for people writing books. Thus it was very interesting to read how Woolf, Eliot, Law­r­ence and Forster approached the writing process in very diff­erent ways. Goldstein described in depth the process for each of these writers. Virginia Woolf, for example, was my type of woman! She allocated two hours every morning as sacred writing time, boosted by walking and journal writing. In fact each of the four writers nominated sacred times and sacred places to clear their minds and boost their creativity.

The sharing of ideas while reading and discussing each other’s work was also important, whether with individuals or in writers’ groups. EM Forster readily admitted that he learned a great deal from reading Virginia Woolf’s writing.

That these clever writers had to overcome incapacitating physical and mental illnesses was an anxiety-provoking part of the book for me. What happens if locking oneself in a study for hours on end damages all writers’ mental health and threatens their marriages? Eliot suffered from both anxiety and depression, and his editor had great problems in getting Eliot to deliver his poems in time for publication. Forster spent the year incoherent from grief over the death of his lover in Egypt.

The reigning theme of the book, according to The New York Times was writer’s block, treated as an anthropological constant. I am fortunate – academics don’t even need to know what writer’s block means 😊

The Hogarth Press publishing house, founded in 1917 by Leonard and Virginia Woolf, was successful. Yet Virginia and Leonard would not publish James Joyce’s Ulysses. Books of such large volume were difficult for such a small press. Worse still, they probably thought that the book would be banned, shutting the Hogarth Press down. Neither D.H Lawrence nor Virginia could read Ulysses in its entirely.

DH Lawrence was very fortunate that travel did not disrupt his ability to write. Some of Lawrence’s books were banned in the UK, so instead of facing the obscenity laws at home, he saw his time abroad as voluntary exile. I will only mention two trips. In Feb 1922 Lawrence and his wife visited the famous patron of the arts Mable Dodge Luhan in Taos New Mexico, which started in 1917. Copying Gertrude Stein’s cultural salon in Paris, Lawrence would have been expected to socialise with influential artists and poets.

Later that same year Lawrence and his wife went on a very successful tour of Australia for three months in 1922. His novel Kangaroo was published in 1923.

Eliot and Forster were regular visitors at the Woolfs' home, but it was more personal and less glitterati than Taos. Leonard even took the risk of warning Forster about the dangers of writing love stories between gay men

Geniuses yes, but very human. Woolf emerged as a patrician gossip, Forster as a tragic romantic, Eliot as unbearably formal and pretentious, and Lawrence as an irritant (NPR).




22 comments:

roentare said...

These writers are the harbinger of modern literature. Yet, they all have unique personalities too.

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

Names that didn't ring any bells in my head so this was a little more interesting for me

My name is Erika. said...

I think it is sometimes hard to talk about a specific topic and world events at the same time. I am guessing this book was written by someone who's life is all about literature, not history in general. Have a wonderful start to 2024.

River said...

Your longest blog posts are 1000 words? Please excuse me while I go back and count them.
I'm not big on literary stuff, far too longwinded for me. I like fiction that grabs me in chapter one and proceeds through the chapters at a romping pace and disappoints me when the book is over becauuse "I want more!"

hels said...

Roentare
Every person has a unique personality, but creative stars' personalities stand out in the glare of public inspection. If I had secret husbands, vast inherited wealth, or had a passion for Melbourne Cup race horses, noone could care less. If Virginia Woolf did, everyone would know.. and care.

hels said...

Jo-Anne
Although some of the authors were Set Reading in high school, others were authors I also didn't know.
Reputations rise in a generation, and fade in the next!

hels said...

Erika
I agree with you totally. As long as you know what the title The World Broke in Two: The Year That Changed Literature refers to.

hels said...

River
I have always tended to over-write. So since 2008 I have learned to include everything I know about a topic, add up the words, and cut back and back until it is down to a 1000 words maximum.

I don't like long winded literature, as you don't. And I am certain other blog readers can't be bothered tackling PhD theses either. I would rather be sailing to New Zealand.. oh I am :)

DUTA said...

I like it that the four British famous writers exchanged ideas and interconnected, despite, perhaps literary rivalry.
I also like it that they were 'human geniuses' with human weaknesses. It's no wonder that they believed in simplicity and clarity of thought in art and literature, in progress and rationality.

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels, It sounds like this author is making too much of circumstantial evidence. Of course all authors or artists are products of their times and inputs. I suppose that tracing the commencement of modern writing has value, but there are those who make it a self-fulfilling prophecy; since they like modernism, they find its roots in, say, Henry James, Voltaire, or Chaucer, or certain working conditions--it doesn't matter whom or what, as long as it ends in the glory of Modernism.
--Jim
p.s. Now I want to hear more about your secret husbands, vast fortune, and the Melbourne Cup, or would that require more than one thousand words?

hels said...

DUTA
I usually think of modernism, in literature or other arts, as meaning the beginning of a new era. It probably happens every 30 years!
But perhaps you got the meaning more clearly than Goldstein did i.e simplicity and clarity of thought.

hels said...

Parmassus
Participants in all the arts must be products of their times, to some extent, unless they are born in a sealed monastery and are never exposed to outside thinking. But it would be amazing if writers, sculptors, architects etc didn't see the work of those who came before them. I would never write like DH Lawrence, but I still read his most important books.

Re the potential vast fortune, my parents spent it in their old age village ha ha

hels said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
River said...

You are sailing to New Zealand?? Lucky, lucky you. It's on my list of places to go when I win the lottery, along with England, Ireland and maybe Canada.

hels said...

River
I am in Auckland as we speak/type. The days spent on land tours have been fascinating but the days on board ship have been dedicated to lectures, musical performances and the art gallery. If you don't bring books yourself, the ship library has been very helpful.

Luiz Gomes said...

Bom dia. Quero agradecer pelo seu carinho e amizade, desejo um Feliz Ano Novo com muita paz e saúde.

Rachel Phillips said...

1922 was also the year the BBC started.

hels said...

Luiz
Hopefully 2024 will be a year of cultural blossoming around the world, peace and community development.

hels said...

Rachel
Wouldn't it be fantastic if the timing was _not_ coincidental. That in the years after the WW1 massacres, the UK wanted to assume its old place with world leadership in learning, literature, modernity and the arts.

Fun60 said...

It was D H Lawrence that captured my imagination. I read as much of his work as I could get hold of in my youth. I never gave a thought to who he was or his life.

hels said...

Fun60
I read every late 19th-early 20th century novel that was set for students in high school and enjoyed most of them. But once I graduated from uni in 1970, I selected my own favourites.

hels said...

Fun60
oops including Bruce Chatwin and Joanna Trollope