The wild body : 'a soldier of humour' and other stories
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The wild body : 'a soldier of humour' and other stories
(Penguin modern classics)
Penguin, 2004
Available at 4 libraries
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Note
"First published by Chatto and Windus 1927" --T.p. verso
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Wyndham Lewis can claim to be one of a tiny handful of British artists who had a European reach and ambition. Creator with Ezra Pound of Vorticism, editor, designer and author of the great art manifesto Blast, a great painter and portraitist, novelist, polemicist and hater of the Bloomsbury movement, through a long life Lewis remained controversial, belligerent and very funny. With Joyce, Eliot and Pound (all of whose definitive portraits he painted) he stood for a heroic engagement with art and literature - and his ultimate (and unique) achievement was to be both a spectacular novelist and a spectacular painter.
The Wild Body showcases his most original, daring and entertaining short fiction, mainly written around the time of Blast. In amazing contrast with so much feeble British writing of the period, it shows the heady delight of modernism at full tilt.
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