Dostoevsky and English Modernism, 1900-1930

ISBN
9780521024198
$34.95
Author Kaye, Peter
Format Paperback
Details
  • 9.0" x 6.1" x 0.7"
  • Active Record
  • Individual Title
  • Books
  • 260
  • Yes
  • Print
  • 1
  • PR478.M6 K39 1999
When Constance Garnett's translations (1910-20) made Dostoevsky's novels accessible in England for the first time they introduced a disruptive and liberating literary force, and English novelists had to confront a new model and rival. The writers who are the focus of this study - Lawrence, Woolf, Bennett, Conrad, Forster, Galsworthy and James - either admired or feared Dostoevsky as a monster who might dissolve all literary and cultural distinctions. Though their responses differed greatly, these writers were unanimous in their inability to recognize Dostoevsky as a literary artist. They viewed him instead as a psychologist, a mystic, a prophet and, in the cases of Lawrence and Conrad, a hated rival who compelled creative response. This study constructs a map of English modernist novelists' misreadings of Dostoevsky, and in so doing it illuminates their aesthetic and cultural values and the nature of the modern English novel.