The Island: War and Belonging in Auden's England

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Product Details
Price
$35.00
Publisher
Belknap Press
Publish Date
Pages
768
Dimensions
6.52 X 9.41 X 1.78 inches | 2.71 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780674025226

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About the Author

Nicholas Jenkins teaches English Literature at Stanford University. His writing has appeared in the New Yorker, the Times Literary Supplement, and the New Republic, among other publications. He is the literary executor of the ballet impresario Lincoln Kirstein.

Reviews
The Island is a Copernican Revolution in Auden studies, a revelatory and often exciting book that presents a new and convincing account of Auden's early years. It explores, for the first time, the deep connections between the inner workings of his poems and the worlds of politics and economics. By bringing to light Auden's ambition to be a national poet, Jenkins transforms our understanding of not only Auden himself but all of modernist literature.--Edward Mendelson, author of Early Auden and Later Auden
Nicholas Jenkins is one of our most perceptive and resourceful critics. In this wonderful study of the early Auden, he brings to bear history, biography, and an acute sense of the artistic moment to fashion for us a young genius who is conservative, bucolic, gay, a patriotic adherent of post-imperial Little England. Most people work backwards from a writer's ultimate reputation, but Jenkins gives us a new, unexpected image of a poet developing in the aftermath of World War I and the collapse of modernism.--Edmund White, author of The Humble Lover
A superb, deeply researched study of Auden's early work and identity. Jenkins's understanding of young Auden as a poet shaped and haunted by the First World War--assimilating the influence of Wilfred Owen, Edward Thomas, Robert Graves, and W. H. R. Rivers--is convincing, original, and poignant. Fusing biography, cultural history, and literary criticism in innovative and elegant ways, The Island is a landmark publication in modernist studies.--Heather Clark, author of Red Comet: The Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath
This trenchant study of Auden's relationship to English national identity reanimates the young poet and his early work. Jenkins puts Auden into personal, social, and political context, leading us to new and exciting readings of his life and poems. A revealing and original reexamination of one of the great twentieth-century poets.--Mary V. Dearborn, author of Ernest Hemingway: A Biography
This exacting study from Jenkins, an English professor at Stanford University, traces the artistic development of poet W.H. Auden from his first stabs at poetry in 1922 to his departure from England in 1937.-- "Publishers Weekly" (4/10/2024 12:00:00 AM)
A beautiful study of a young poet haunted by war. Exemplary scholarship and profound sensitivity combine in...Jenkins' nuanced reading of the early work of W.H. Auden...A deeply informed, perceptive literary study.-- "Kirkus Reviews (starred review)" (4/20/2024 12:00:00 AM)