The Early Twentieth Century

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THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY

Irish drama flowered in the early 20th cent., largely under the aegis of the Abbey Theatre in Dublin (see Irish literary renaissance ). John Millington Synge , William

Butler Yeats , and Sean O'Casey all wrote on Irish themes—mythical in Yeats's poetic drama, political in

O'Casey's realistic plays. Also Irish, George Bernard

Shaw wrote biting dramas that reflect all aspects of

British society. In fact, many of the towering figures of

20th-century English literature were not English; Shaw,

Yeats, Joyce, O'Casey, and Beckett were Irish, Dylan

Thomas was Welsh, T. S. Eliot was born an American, and Conrad was Polish.

YEATS, W. B.

Yeats, W. B. (William Butler Yeats), 1865–

1939, Irish poet and playwright, b. Dublin. The greatest lyric poet Ireland has produced and one of the major figures of 20th-century literature, Yeats was the acknowledged leader of the Irish literary renaissance .

SHAW, GEORGE BERNARD

Shaw, George Bernard, 1856–1950, Irish playwright and critic. He revolutionized the

Victorian stage, then dominated by artificial melodramas, by presenting vigorous dramas of ideas. The lengthy prefaces to Shaw's plays reveal his mastery of English prose. In 1925 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Work as a journalist led to his becoming a music critic for the Star in 1888 and for the

World in 1890; his enthusiasm for Wagner proved infectious to his readers. As drama critic for the Saturday Review after 1895, he won readers to Ibsen ; he had already written The

Quintessence of Ibsenism (1891). In 1898

Shaw married Charlotte Payne-Townshend, a wealthy, wellborn Irishwoman. By this time his plays were beginning to be produced.

Poetry in the early 20th cent. was typified by the conventional romanticism of such poets as:

1. John Masefield ,

2.Alfred Noyes ,

3.Walter de la Mare

4.Hilda Doolittle (H. D.),

5.Richard Aldington ,

6.Herbert Read ,

7. D. H. Lawrence .

World War I shook England to the core. As social mores were shaken, so too were artistic conventions. The work of war poets like Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen , the latter killed in the war (as were Rupert Brooke and

Isaac Rosenberg ), was particularly influential.

The new era called for new forms, typified by the work of

Gerard Manley Hopkins, first published in 1918, and of

T. S. Eliot , whose long poem The Waste Land (1922) was a watershed in both American and English literary history. Its difficulty, formal invention, and bleak antiromanticism were to influence poets for decades.

ELIOT, T. S.

(Thomas Stearns Eliot), 1888–1965, American-

British poet and critic, b. St. Louis, Mo. One of the most distinguished literary figures of the

20th cent., T. S. Eliot won the 1948 Nobel Prize in Literature. He studied at Harvard, the

Sorbonne, and Oxford. In 1914 he established residence in London and in 1927 became a

British subject.

After working as a teacher and a bank clerk he began a publishing career; he was assistant editor of the Egoist (1917–19) and edited his own quarterly, the Criterion (1922–39). In 1925 he was employed by the publishing house of Faber and Faber, eventually becoming one of its directors. His first marriage, to Vivienne Haigh-

Wood in 1915, was troubled, and ended with their separation in 1933. His subsequent marriage to

Valerie Fletcher in 1957 was far more successful.

JOYCE, JAMES

Joyce, James, 1882–1941, Irish novelist.

Perhaps the most influential and significant novelist of the 20th cent., Joyce was a master of the English language, exploiting all of its resources. His novel Ulysses, which is among the great works of world literature, utilizes many radical literary techniques and forms.

ULYSSES

 recreates the events of one day in Dublin—June 16,

1904; widely known as “Bloomsday”—centering on the activities of a Jewish advertising-space salesman.

The fundamental design of Ulysses is based on Homer's

Odyssey ; each chapter in the novel parallels one in the epic and is also associated with an hour of the day, color, symbol, and part of the body. Attempting to recreate the total life of his characters—the surface life and the inner life—Joyce mingles realistic descriptions with verbal representations of his characters' most intimate and random thoughts, using techniques of interior narration.

WOOLF, VIRGINIA (STEPHEN), 1882–1941,

English novelist and essayist; daughter of Sir Leslie Stephen .

A successful innovator in the form of the novel, she is considered a significant force in 20th-century fiction. She was educated at home from the resources of her father's huge library. In 1912 she married Leonard Woolf, a critic and writer on economics, with whom she set up the Hogarth

Press in 1917. Their home became a gathering place for a circle of artists, critics, and writers known as the Bloomsbury group . As a novelist Woolf's primary concern was to represent the flow of ordinary experience. Her emphasis was not on plot or characterization but on a character's consciousness, his thoughts and feelings, which she brilliantly illuminated by the stream of consciousness technique.

HUXLEY, ALDOUS LEONARD, 1894–1963

English author; grandson of Thomas Henry

Huxley . Educated at Eton and Oxford, he traveled widely and during the 1920s lived in

Italy. He came to the United States in the 1937 and settled in California. On the verge of blindness from the time he was 16, Huxley devoted much time and energy in an effort to improve his vision. He began his literary career writing critical essays and symbolist poetry, but he soon turned to the novel.

Moved by the Great Depression, the rise of fascism, and English policies of appeasement, many writers and intellectuals sought solutions in the politics of the left—or the right. Wyndham

Lewis satirized what he thought was the total dissolution of culture in Apes of Gods (1930).

George Orwell fought with the Republicans in the

Spanish Civil War. The experience left him profoundly disillusioned with Communism, a feeling he eloquently expressed in such works as

Animal Farm (1946) and Nineteen Eighty-four

(1949).

The experience left him profoundly disillusioned with Communism, a feeling he eloquently expressed in such works as Animal Farm

(1946) and Nineteen Eighty-four (1949). The poets W. H. Auden , Christopher Isherwood ,

Stephen Spender , and C. Day Lewis all proclaimed their leftist respective political commitments, but the pressing demands of

World War II superseded these long-term ideals.

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