B.S. Johnson and post-war literature : possibilities of the Avant-Garde / edited by Julia Jordan, lecturer, UCL, UK ; and Martin Ryle, Reader, University of Sussex, UK.
B.S. Johnson, Giles Gordon and a 'New Fiction': The Book, the Screen and the E-book / David Hucklesby. 12. Johnson in His Time: Influences and Contemporaries: 1. Early Influences and Aesthetic Emergence: Travelling People (1961), Albert Angelo (1964), Trawl (1966) and The Unfortunates (1969) / Philip Tew; 2. Johnson and the nouveau roman: Trawl and other Butorian Projects / Adam Guy; 3. 'Like loose leaves in the wind': Effacement and Characterisation in B.S. Johnson's The Unfortunates and Marc Saporta's Composition No. 1 / Greg Buchanan; 4. B.S. Johnson and the Aleatoric Novel / Sebastian Jenner; 5. Cell of One: B.S. Johnson, Christie Malry and The Angry Brigade / Joseph Darlington; 6. 'Educated and intelligent, if down-at-heel': John Wain's Hurry On Down and B.S. Johnson's Albert Angelo / Martin Ryle -- Part II. Johnson Out of Time: The Persistence of Modernism: 7. Antepostdated Johnson / Rod Mengham; 8. Evacuating Samuel Beckett and B.S. Johnson / Julia Jordan; 9. The Sadism of the Author or the Masochism of the Reader? / Glyn White; 10. Sex, Lies and Autobiografiction: Travelling People and the Persistence of Modernism / Nick Hubble; 11. 'Make of Them What You Will': The Short Prose Pieces of B.S. Johnson / Paul Vlitos; 12. B.S. Johnson, Giles Gordon and a 'New Fiction': The Book, the Screen and the E-book / David Hucklesby.
Summary:
"B.S. Johnson is increasingly a crucial figure in the ongoing reassessment of the literary scene since the Second World War. He is central to the generation from which he came (he has even been called by his biographer, Jonathan Coe, the 'one man avant-garde of the nineteen-sixties'), but he is also pivotal in wider contexts; his brand of experimental writing reaches back to Beckett and Joyce, transcends national boundaries in its kinship with avant garde continental writing, and gestures forward to a strand of contemporary literature that is similarly preoccupied with form, constraint, difficulty, and truth. B.S. Johnson and Post-War Literature builds on the growing interest in Johnson, and seeks to continue the work of recovering him, and the wider circle of sixties 'experimentalists' of which he was a part, from the marginalisation that this term sometimes implies, through the delineation of his historical, political and literary contexts"-- Provided by publisher.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.