Making History New
Modernism and Historical Narrative
Seamus O'Malley
Reviews and Awards
"The book offers a well-judged, beautifully written and extensively referenced interpretation of several modernist novels 'invested in history as a narrative project' and 'as a subject or setting'... [A] cutting-edge study and necessary reading for scholars working on the convergences between literary experiment and the processes, problems and possibilities of memory." --Literature & History
"Making History New challenges the claim that literary modernism abandoned history. With close attention to historical narratives by Joseph Conrad, Ford Madox Ford, and Rebecca West, Seamus O'Malley rediscovers the historiographical significance of modernist experimentation. Reading the three authors as an exemplary constellation of modernists, Making History New illuminates a deeply historical turn at the heart of high modernism and invites a re-evaluation of the field of modernist studies. O'Malley simultaneously brings historiography to bear on literary modernism and makes modernist narrative newly relevant to debates about how history is made, written, and read." --Christopher GoGwilt, author of The Passage of Literature: Genealogies of Modernism in Conrad, Rhys, and Pramoedya
"Seamus O'Malley's discovery of a modernist historiography complicates and clarifies the relationship between modernism and history; leads to convincing new readings of well-known and more obscure works of fiction; and suggests ways in which historians today can learn from modernist innovations to create new historical forms. Making History New is a refreshingly innovative reassessment of literary modernism." --Louise Blakeney Williams, author of Modernism and the Ideology of History: Literature, Politics, and the Past
"Making History New is a compelling and erudite contribution to modernist studies that advances our knowledge of the field and the three canonical authors--Conrad, Ford, West--at its heart. O'Malley's command of his sources is magisterial; he presents a truly interdisciplinary approach to this complex and sophisticated topic." --Bernard Schweitzer, author of Hating God: The Untold Story of Misotheism
"Making History New offers a bold and original challenge to the received idea of modernism as anti-historical. O'Malley makes a powerful case for an engagement with the experience and representation of history as being constitutive of modernism, from the early modernist historiographic fictions of Conrad and Ford, through the novels of the First World War, to West's reflections on the Holocaust and the Nuremberg Trials. His subtle readings illuminate the richness of modernism's meditations on the nature and the problematics of the historical." --Max Saunders, author of Self Impression: Life-Writing, Autobiografiction, and the Forms of Modern Literature
"Making History New is entirely successful in challenging the claim that modernism is anti-historical... Making History New opens up an original--and potentially significant--field of research in modernist studies." --Times Literary Supplement