
Reviews
'I am half in love with the typewriter and the telephone' says one of Virginia Woolf's characters. British modernism had a polyamorous affair with media—crowds and wireless, soil and fog. Aleksandr Prigozhin brilliantly cultivates a neglected source for figuring media as the elemental materials of our common life. Visionary and revisionist.
Aleksandr Prighozin has written a book that is both remarkably timely, and scrupulously historical. In brilliant readings of modernist fiction, he shows how British writers imagined the fraught worlds they created as expressions of the media—from the most primordial to the radically contemporary—with which they argued, desired, and, just like us, did their best to make livable.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. "The Dust of Men's Lives": Impressionism and the Matter of Common Life
2. Porous Enclosures: Virginia Woolf's Cellular Architectures
3. Listening In: D.H. Lawrence and the
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. "The Dust of Men's Lives": Impressionism and the Matter of Common Life
2. Porous Enclosures: Virginia Woolf's Cellular Architectures
3. Listening In: D.H. Lawrence and the Wireless
4. On Communist Soil: Sylvia Townsend Warner and Andrei Platonov
5. Figure, Network, Cloud: Late Interwar Infrastructures
Coda
Notes
Works Cited
Index