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Auden and Documentary in the 1930s Marsha Bryant

Auden and Documentary in the 1930s By Marsha Bryant

Auden and Documentary in the 1930s by Marsha Bryant


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Summary

Restoring to Auden's canon the commentaries he wrote for documentary films and the photographs he published in travelogues, the author considers the interplay of visual and literary texts during the 1930s, and how Auden's work may suggest new models of representation.

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Auden and Documentary in the 1930s Summary

Auden and Documentary in the 1930s by Marsha Bryant

W.H. Auden established his literary reputation in a decade framed by economic depression and global war. He emerged as the defining literary voice of the 1930s while the doumentary genre emerged as the decade's principal discourse of social reality. In Auden and Documentary in the 1930s, Marsha Bryant examines this cultural convergence to challenge standard assumptions about socially engaged art. Restoring to Auden's canon the commentaries he wrote for documentary films and the photographs he published in his documentary travelogues, she considers the decade's interplay of visual and literary texts. Auden's first-hand experience with the British documentary film movement, along with his position as a gay man, prompted him to interrogate the politics of documentary representation. His work with the GPO Film Unit reveals ways in which the act of men filming men can blur boundaries of class and homerotic voyeurism. In Letters from Iceland Auden juxtaposes poetry, prose and photographs, using modernist collage to question documentary ideas of order. The famous poem Spain challenges the artist's role as observer by rejecting journalistic techniques such as interviews and reportage and obscuring distinctions between civilian and soldier, reader and text. In Journey to a War, another collaboration between photographs and words, Auden and Christopher Isherwood use their position as gay Englishmen in China to expose the heterosexism and imperialism inherent in traditional British documentary discourse. The 1930s continue to provide our dominant models of socially engaged art, especially through the documentary genre. In Auden's alternative documentary texts, Bryant reveals, the 1930s can also suggest new models of representation. This multilayered study should appeal to scholars of film studies, modernism, cultural studies and gay studies, as well as to Auden's legions of fans.

Additional information

CIN0813917565VG
9780813917566
0813917565
Auden and Documentary in the 1930s by Marsha Bryant
Used - Very Good
Hardback
University of Virginia Press
19971229
208
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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