Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Fantasias on National Themes: Fantasy, Space, and Imperialism in Rebecca West

View through CrossRef
This article argues that Rebecca West’s sustained scrutiny of imperialism tends to coincide with her theoretical and formalist approaches to fantasy, and from this arises literary innovation significant both to modernist and late modernist contexts. It demonstrates that West’s creative achievement in Harriet Hume (1929), which partially adapts the conventions of other middlebrow and modernist fantasy literature of her day, is usefully read in conjunction with her assessment of interwar geopolitics, and especially her interest in the collective, sociopolitical fantasies that gather around contested national spaces. Furthermore, in Harriet Hume West elaborates a rhetoric of fantasy—stylistically whimsical, and ideologically what might be called a fantasia on national themes—that was elevated to new importance a decade later in her archetypal attack on imperialism, the Balkans travelogue Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1941).
Title: Fantasias on National Themes: Fantasy, Space, and Imperialism in Rebecca West
Description:
This article argues that Rebecca West’s sustained scrutiny of imperialism tends to coincide with her theoretical and formalist approaches to fantasy, and from this arises literary innovation significant both to modernist and late modernist contexts.
It demonstrates that West’s creative achievement in Harriet Hume (1929), which partially adapts the conventions of other middlebrow and modernist fantasy literature of her day, is usefully read in conjunction with her assessment of interwar geopolitics, and especially her interest in the collective, sociopolitical fantasies that gather around contested national spaces.
Furthermore, in Harriet Hume West elaborates a rhetoric of fantasy—stylistically whimsical, and ideologically what might be called a fantasia on national themes—that was elevated to new importance a decade later in her archetypal attack on imperialism, the Balkans travelogue Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1941).

Related Results

Fantasy, Counter-fantasy, and Meta-fantasy in Hobbes’s and Butler’s Accounts of Vulnerability
Fantasy, Counter-fantasy, and Meta-fantasy in Hobbes’s and Butler’s Accounts of Vulnerability
Hobbes and Butler both conjure images of an abandoned infant in their respective discussions of vulnerability. Leviathan uses this image to discuss original dominion, or natural ma...
Plastic fantastic: Sex robots and/as sexual fantasy
Plastic fantastic: Sex robots and/as sexual fantasy
This article provides an interdisciplinary and intersectional analysis of sex robots and/as sexual fantasy. I demonstrate that sexual fantasy is a highly complex and salient vector...
Digital Labor and Imperialism
Digital Labor and Imperialism
A century has now passed since Lenin's <em>Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism</em> (1916) and Bukharin's <em>Imperialism and World Economy</em> (1...
New imperialism
New imperialism
This article explores whether contemporary society can be characterized as demonstrating a new form of the Marxist notion of imperialism and as informational/ media imperialism. In...
Discourses of “Imperialism” in the Late Qing Dynasty
Discourses of “Imperialism” in the Late Qing Dynasty
Abstract Imperialism, the key concept of modern politics and society, entered China via Japan in the late Qing Dynasty. This concept had been endowed with rich connotations before ...
The “silver net of civilization”: Aesthetic Imperialism in Mary Shelley’s The Last Man
The “silver net of civilization”: Aesthetic Imperialism in Mary Shelley’s The Last Man
This essay examines the interrelations of religion, civilization, and imperialism in Shelley’s The Last Man. Though Shelley may envision the negative effects of imperialism in this...
Rebecca West's ‘Seamed Red Hand’
Rebecca West's ‘Seamed Red Hand’
The political commitments of Rebecca West's The Return of the Soldier (1918) have proven hard to define. More subdued in its tone and telos than her volleys against patriarchal cap...
Rebecca West and the Double Agent
Rebecca West and the Double Agent
This essay will explore the figure of the double agent as it tests notions of citizenship mid-century, specifically the clash or fusion of internationalist/nationalist definitions ...

Recent Results

The Inside Out Ceremony
The Inside Out Ceremony
“The Inside Out Ceremony” is a series of self-portraits, wall sculptures, installations and artworks protected in glass jars, created by painter and engraver Anna Charaktinou....
John Baptist Jackson
John Baptist Jackson
Jacob Kainen, Printmakers, 1962, U.S. National Museum...
Alexandre da Cunha, Amazons (Painting II) (2014)
Alexandre da Cunha, Amazons (Painting II) (2014)
Beach towel, sail, linen, cotton, sarong, 230 × 380 × 4 cm...

Back to Top