Modernism and the New Spain - Britain, Cosmopolitan Europe, and Literary History
How and why did a country seen as remote, backwards, and barely European become a pivotal site for reinventing the continent after the Great War? Modernism and the New Spain argues that the "Spanish problem" -- the nation's historically troubled relationship with Europe -- provided an animating impulse for interwar literary modernism and for new conceptions of cosmopolitanism. Drawing on works in a variety of genres, Gayle Rogers reconstructs an archive of cross-cultural exchanges to reveal the mutual constitution of two modernist movements -- one in Britain, the other in Spain, and stretching at key moments in between to Ireland and the Americas.
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