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Arts & Ideas

New Thinking: Modernism, exile and homelessness

Arts & Ideas

BBC

Society & Culture

4.2599 Ratings

🗓️ 9 October 2023

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

DH Lawrence described outcasts living by the Thames, Mina Loy made art from trash, calling her pieces “refusées", Wyndham Lewis moved from England to North America in search of fame and stability after having been spurned by the cultural establishment in Britain. In this conversation about new research, Jade Munslow Ong discusses the way widening the canon of writers traditionally labelled as “modernist” might allow a greater understanding of attitudes towards homelessness and poverty in the early decades of the twentieth century.

Dr Laura Ryan was a Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Galway researching modernism and homelessness investigating the work of writers who were literally homeless, including D. H. Lawrence, Claude McKay, Jean Rhys and Tom Kromer, and also looking at depictions of homelessness in modernist texts by George Orwell, Mina Loy and Samuel Beckett. She now teaches at the University of Limerick.

Dr Nathan Waddell is Associate Professor in Twentieth-Century Literature at the University of Birmingham. He is writing new books about Wyndham Lewis and about George Orwell. He has also edited collections of essays on Lewis, who featured in books already published by Nathan called Modernist Nowheres and Moonlighting. Nathan is also editing The Oxford Handbook of George Orwell. You can hear Nathan in a Free Thinking episode exploring futurism in a collection of discussions about modernism on the website of the Radio 3 Arts and Ideas programme

Dr Jade Munslow Ong is a Reader in English Literature at the University of Salford where she is working on a project entitled South African Modernism 1880-2020. You can hear about some of the authors featured in her Essay for Radio 3 called The South African Bloomsberries. She is a New Generation Thinker on the scheme run by the BBC and the Arts and Humanities Research Council to turn research into radio

This podcast is made in partnership with the AHRC, part of UKRI. You can sign up for more episodes of the Arts and Ideas podcast wherever you find your podcasts or look at the collection of discussions focused on New Research available via the Free Thinking programme website.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Can I just say?

0:01.5

You're about to listen to a BBC podcast.

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It's such a wonderful listen.

0:05.6

So nice.

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There are loads more like it on BBC sounds.

0:08.8

Different paces, different heights.

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The roof is buckling.

0:11.9

Where you can also listen to live sports commentary.

0:14.2

It's right foot goes for goal.

0:16.7

And then enjoy even more podcasts full of analysis and reaction to the big stories.

0:21.7

The stat that is astonishing is they ended with the lowest amount of possession.

0:25.2

And she's had to live with that.

0:26.8

So if you love sport, a passion, it's almost like a religion.

0:29.7

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:31.7

Sort of expecting that every week now.

0:34.6

Welcome to this new thinking episode of the Arts and Ideas podcast, where we're talking about

0:39.0

how experiences of homelessness and exile fed into the writing of early 20th century authors

0:43.9

like James Joyce and Samuel Beckett. But I'm also hoping to learn about some lesser-known

0:48.5

writers too. I'm Jade Munsla Wong, and I teach at the University of Salford. I research

0:53.8

modernist literature from South Africa.

0:56.0

Let me introduce the pair of academics that I'll be talking to today. My first guest is Dr Nathan Waddall,

1:01.9

Associate Professor at the University of Birmingham. Nathan, before we go any further, perhaps you could start

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