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One - Literature and Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2020

Bernard Crick
Affiliation:
Birkbeck College
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Summary

Originally in The Critical Quarterly, vol. 22, no. 2, (Summer 1980) and a revised version was given as the Hannah Arendt Memorial Lecture at the University of Southampton 1983.

If one set a group of good students an essay with this title, one might anticipate any or all of these interpretations: (i) the antipathy of the two concepts; (ii) their necessary interdependence; (iii) the duty of writers to commit themselves; (iv) the duty of writers not to commit themselves; (v) the influence of politics in writers; (vi) the influence of writers on politics; (vii) the clash of censorship and free expression; (viii) the control and use of writers by the state in other countries than our own; (ix) examples of good and bad political writing; (x) a case for the privatisation of public libraries; (xi) a demand for subsidies for unsuccessful writers; and (xii) a demonstration (granted certain theoretical premises) that Literature is a bourgeois concept and that the novel has a special role in maintaining the class system. There could be other angles. There are more than seven types of ambiguity. And as is said of the Irish problem, every time a solution is offered the question is changed. But Professor Flowers comes to help us all; he is general editor of a recent series of short books with the general title ‘Writers and Politics’: J.A. Morris, Writers and Politics in Modern Britain. C.E. Williams, Writers and Politics in Modern Germany. J.E. Flower, Writers and Politics in Modem France. John Gatt-Rutter, Writers and Politics in Modem Italy. Janet Mawby, Writers and Politics in Modem Scandanavia. J. Butt, Writers and Politics in Modern Spain, all published by Hodder and Stoughton, 1977-9.

What the series is not about is at least clear. It is not about the sociology of literature, which is a welcome change. Long before the Frankfurt Schule and the epochal birth of the Hungarian trimmer, George Lukács, even before the coming of Raymond Williams to Cambridge, German students of Shakespeare in the 1900s used to learn all about the social composition of the audience at the Globe, who looked after the horses and when oranges were first sold in English theatres, long before they came to read the texts for themselves, still less to deconstruct them.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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