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Download fileA Secret House: Evelyn Waugh's Book Collection
This article examines Evelyn Waugh’s private library, reading his habits of book collection as a particular mode of late modernist practice. In private and public writing particularly during the Second World War, Waugh the book collector is simultaneously consumer, producer, and cultural combatant. Indeed, Waugh’s collection practices parallel his satiric practices: both satire and collection are guided by the impulse to discriminate, connoting both the pejorative and elitist senses of exclusion, but also selection, deliberation, and distinction. Waugh’s careful assemblage of a library at odds with mainstream literary culture proffers a striking case study of the contested cultural landscape of England in the space between, and after, the two world wars.
History
Publication title
The Space Between Literature and Culture 1914-1945Volume
12Issue
1-6Pagination
1-20ISSN
1551-9309Department/School
School of HumanitiesPublisher
Monmouth University * Department of EnglishPlace of publication
United StatesRights statement
Copyright 2016 The Author. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Repository Status
- Open