TL;DRAbstract
The idea of the fin de siècle has been given a renewed cachet by the coming end of the twentieth century. The approach of another turn-of-the-century experience has concentrated minds. After a lapse of some seventy years, Holbrook Jackson's seminal work on the 1890s has been joined by a rash of new studies. This revival of interest demands scrutiny, for within the discourse of literary and cultural criticism the end of the nineteenth century has traditionally fallen somewhere (somewhere not very interesting) between the grand narratives of Victorianism and modernism. Raymond Williams famously characterized the fin de siècle as an interregnum, half dismissing it as a ‘working-out, rather, of unfinished lines; a tentative redirection’. Such a designation of the late nineteenth century as a transitional period has led to its backwater status in literary and cultural criticism.
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The idea of the fin de siècle has been given a renewed cachet by the coming end of the twentieth century. The approach of another turn-of-the-century experience has concentrated minds. After a lapse of some seventy years, Holbrook Jackson's seminal work on the 1890s has been joined by a rash of new studies. This revival of interest demands scrutiny, for within the discourse of literary and cultural criticism the end of the nineteenth century has traditionally fallen somewhere (somewhere not very interesting) between the grand narratives of Victorianism and modernism. Raymond Williams famously characterized the fin de siècle as an interregnum, half dismissing it as a ‘working-out, rather, of unfinished lines; a tentative redirection’. Such a designation of the late nineteenth century as a transitional period has led to its backwater status in literary and cultural criticism.
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