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Recent Publication Information for Andrea Zemgulys

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Modernism and the Locations of Literary Heritage

AUTHOR

Andrea Zemgulys
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Modernist writers in the early twentieth century aimed to write in inventive and transformative ways, but they lived in places celebrated for their association with the achievements of past generations. For E. M. Forster, T. S. Eliot, and Virginia Woolf, this contrast was strongly felt: living and writing in London, they found themselves in a city that was being fashioned as "historic" in ways incongruous with their own critical ideals. In this innovative study, Andrea Zemgulys reads the early writings of Forster, Eliot, and Woolf against the development of a growing heritage industry in England generally and London in particular. Her study offers new analyses of major works and a fascinating history of the making of literary and historical heritage in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Britain.

All recent publications by Andrea Zemgulys

  • Modernism and the Locations of Literary Heritage

All publications by Andrea Zemgulys

"Menu, Memento, Souvenir: From Personal Memory to Social Imagination in Jean Rhys's Good Morning, Midnight" in Johnson and Wilson, eds., Rhys Matters (Palgrave Macmillan 2013). Modernism and the Locations of Literary Heritage (Cambridge University Press, 2008). "Henry James in a Victorian Crowd: "The Birthplace" in Context" (Henry James Review, Fall 2008). "'Night and Day is Dead': Virginia Woolf in London 'Literary and Historic.'" Twentieth Century Literature 46:1 (Spring 2000): 56-77. "Building the Vanished City: Conservationism in Turn-of-the Century London." Nineteenth Century Prose 26:1 (Spring 1999): 35-58.

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