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Mrs. Dalloway as a Modernist text
The term modernism refers to the radical shift in aesthetic and cultural sensibilities evident in the art and literature of the post-World War One period. The ordered, stable and inherently meaningful world view of the nineteenth century could not, wrote T.S. Eliot, accord with "the immense panorama of futility and anarchy which is contemporary history." Modernism thus marks a distinctive break with Victorian bourgeois morality; rejecting nineteenth-century optimism, they presented a profoundly pessimistic picture
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The Gale Group, 2001. Dell'Amico teaches English at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey.
DiBattista, Maria. "Joyce, Woolf, and the Modern Mind." Virginia Woolf: New Critical Essays. Ed. Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy. Totowa: Barnes and Nobel, 1983
Kettle, Arnold - " An Introduction to the English Novel " Vol.2 London: Hyman, 1967. Kenner, Hugh. "The Making of the Modernist Canon." Mazes: Essays by Hugh Kennet. San Francisco: North Point, 1989
WOOLF, VIRGINIA. " The Common Reader. " New York: Harvest Books, 2002.
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