Obscene Modernism: Modernist literature, censorship and obscenity

Lead Research Organisation: Queen Mary University of London
Department Name: English

Abstract

There is extensive research on individual cases of literary censorship, mostly by academic lawyers with an interest in the history of censorship legislation. There are also two recent books on the issue of modernist literature and obscenity, by film called Modernism, Mass Culture, and the Aesthetics of Obscenity (2000) which considers the issue of censorship from the late eighteenth century through to the 1960 Lady Chatterley's Lover trial and Dare entitled The Novel and the Obscene: Sexual Subjects in American Modernism (2005) which looks specifically at American literature and sexual obscenity. A number of recent books have been published on the economic and coterie networks that controlled the circulation of modernist writing.

However, there is no full-length study of the relationship between literary obscenity and the specific legal, publishing, and cultural context of the early twentieth century in Britain and the United States. This project will investigate the question of literary obscenity in the context of such networks of control. It follows on from my previous book, Modernism and Democracy: Literary culture, 1900-1930, (to be published by OUP in July, 2006) which analysed the relationship between modernist literature and ideas of political and legal democracy. In my new book, I will look at the relationship between literature and the law in the specific context of censorship debates. The book is necessary because it will do three new things: 1) provide a new context for understanding the legal and publishing networks that controlled the production and dissemination of modernist writing; 2) throw new light on the way that ideas about freedom of speech and freedom of the person altered in the period in relation to specific events and how these changes impacted on the understanding of literature; and 3) create a new perspective on the artistic aims of modernist writers.

Aims and objectives
I aim to explore a series of interrelated research questions. Why were so many modernist texts censored in Britain and the US in the period 1900-1940 and what forms did this censorship take? What were the specific historical reasons for this conflict between literature and the law? How did censorship impact on ideas of freedom of speech and freedom of the individual? In what ways did these legal ideas impinge on debates about art and literature? How did the political context of the 1930s affect ideas of freedom of speech and the role of artistic language? Further, why did modernist writers want to explore literary obscenity? Why, for example, did James Joyce, who had already experienced censorship over Dubliners (1914), push his writing to entirely new levels of exuberant obscenity in Ulysses (1921)? Why did many of Joyce's literary contemporaries think that Ulysses was obscene? How did such questions inform the publishing and collaborative networks connecting modernist writers? Its potential applications and benefits
The interrogation of this particular set of questions is both timely and necessary. Given current debates about the limits of freedom of speech in modern liberal secular societies I aim to construct a prehistory to such debates with reference to the specific issue of the relationship between freedom of speech and literary expression. The book will argue that modern conceptions of the special freedom of the literary text were put in place during the period 1900-1940, and that this was in response to a particular set of historical events. I envisage that this will be of interest not only to academics and students of modernist literature and culture, but for a general readership interested in the literary culture of the twentieth century.

Publications

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Description My research project involved completing a new book called 'Obscene Modernism: literary censorship and experiment, 1900-1940'. In the book I investigate the relationship between Anglo-American modernist literature, censorship and obscenity.



The book explores three key areas. First it investigates the context of literary production and reception in the period 1900-1940, and considers how arguments about censorship and obscenity controlled the creation and dissemination of modernist texts. Alongside the famous 'Ulysses' trials in 1921 and 1933, and the banning of 'The Rainbow'in 1915, as well as Lawrence's difficulties publishing 'Women in Love' and 'Lady Chatterly's Lover', there were less institutionalised, but sometimes as powerful, forms of censorship which worked to control the dissemination of modernist writing; in the form of printers, publishers, editors, the controllers of circulating libraries such as Boots and Smiths, and even other modernist writers. I investigate the effects of these networks of control on the production and circulation of modernist texts.



Secondly, the book examines how liberal ideas about freedom of speech and freedom of the individual were redefined in response to this wider cultural context. I investigate a number of key historical moments or phenomenon when ideas about obscenity, freedom of speech and the literary text were crystallised. Some of the moments I consider are the following: In 1913 Theodor Dreiser's book 'The "Genius"' was seized by the US legal authorities and UK and US writers rallied to Dreiser's defence in the name of freedom of speech. In 1917, 'The Little Review' was confiscated in the mails on the grounds of obscenity because of two stories, one of which was by Wyndham Lewis. The dispute prompted a series of discussions about the specific relationship between avant-garde expression and the circulation of information during the war. In the 1920s a number of British and American individuals such as Robert McAlmon and Jack Kahane established Paris based publishing presses with the specific aim of publishing banned books. McAlmon's Contact Press and Kahane's Obelisk Press published a number of books that had been condemned by the English Courts. In the process, the publishing press was redefined as a site of linguistic and literary freedom from the UK and US legal authorities. In the 1930s the nature of literary censorship changed significantly in the UK and US as a response to Nazi book burnings of works by writers such as Einstein, Freud, Marx, Gide, Proust, Mann, and Hemingway. The 1933 Woolsey decision to lift the ban on Ulysses was partly seen as America's response to Hitler. In the process, the literary text was redefined as a site of political freedom. The book argues that from 1900 to 1940 the nature of debates in the UK and US about literature, censorship and obscenity became politicised.



Thirdly, the book creates a new context for understanding literary experimentation in the period. It considers why modernist writers wanted to explore artistic obscenity. The obscene is that which writers believe should be left off stage. The reasons for the assertion of these limits on representation are always revealing. Lawrence and Joyce famously explored the obscene, and were prosecuted for it. But there were a whole range of writers who explored the nature of the literary obscene in the period: from Eliot's Sweeney poems to Aldous Huxley's description of the 'obscenity' of family life in Brave New World, huge pressure is put on the idea of the obscene. The book focuses on the different kinds of obscenity, from sex to excrement to something Lawrence calls the 'obscene interior', explored by modernist writers. It argues that these textual moments, when a block on representation is specifically asserted, reveal much about the aesthetic boundaries of modernism.



The book offers a new perspective on the cultural context and aesthetic parameters of modernist writing.
Exploitation Route My research on the internationalism of early twentieth century censorship is central to my next research project on the role of non-governmental writers' organisations on debates about free speech. The writers' organisation International P.E.N. has found this research useful, and has published my findings in its in-house magazine.
Sectors Creative Economy,Education,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description In collaboration with David Bradshaw at Oxford University, I plan to edit a book of essays on literary censorship, 1890-present day. This is still at a very early stage. 
Organisation University of Oxford
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Information taken from Final Report