Tense Future: Modernism, Total War, Encyclopedic Form

Tense Future: Modernism, Total War, Encyclopedic Form

Product ID: 0190200952 Condition: USED (All books in used condition)

Payflex: Pay in 4 interest-free payments of R474.50. Read the FAQ
R 1,898
includes Duties & VAT
Delivery: 10-20 working days
Ships from USA warehouse.
Secure Transaction
VISA Mastercard payflex ozow

Product Description

Condition - Very Good

The item shows wear from consistent use but remains in good condition. It may arrive with damaged packaging or be repackaged.

Tense Future: Modernism, Total War, Encyclopedic Form

We know that trauma can leave syndromes in its wake. But can the anticipation of violence be a form of violence as well? Tense Future argues that it can-that twentieth-century war technologies and practices, particularly the aerial bombing of population centers, introduced non-combatants to a coercive and traumatizing expectation. During wartime, civilians braced for the next raid; during peacetime they braced for the next war. The pre-traumatic stress they experienced permeates the century's public debates and cultural works. In a series of groundbreaking readings, Saint-Amour illustrates how air war prophets theorized the wounding power of anticipation, how archive theory changed course in war's shadow, and how speculative fiction conjured visions of a civilizational collapse that would end literacy itself. And in this book's central chapters, he shows us how Ford Madox Ford, Robert Musil, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and other interwar modernist writers faced the memory of one war and the prospect of another, some by pitting their fictions' encyclopedic scale and formal turbulence against total war, others by conceding war's inevitability while refusing to long for a politically regressive peace.

Total war: a conflict that exempts no one, disregarding any difference between soldier and civilian. Tense Future forever alters our understanding of the concept of total war by tracing its emergence during the First World War, its incubation in air power theory between the wars, and above all its profound partiality. For total war, during most of the twentieth century, meant conflict between imperial nation states; it did not include the violence those states routinely visited on colonial subjects during peacetime. Tacking back and forth between metropole and colony, between world war and police action, Saint-Amour describes the interwar refashioning of a world system of violence-production, one that remains largely intact in our own moment of perpetual interwar.

Technical Specifications

Country
USA
Author
Paul K. Saint-Amour
Binding
Paperback
EAN
9780190200954
Edition
1
IsAdultProduct
ISBN
0190200952
Label
Oxford University Press
Manufacturer
Oxford University Press
NumberOfItems
1
NumberOfPages
368
PublicationDate
2015-03-02
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ReleaseDate
2015-03-02
Studio
Oxford University Press