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The Island

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A Times Literary Supplement Best Book of the Year
A groundbreaking reassessment of W. H. Auden's early life and poetry, shedding new light on his artistic development as well as on his shifting beliefs about political belonging in interwar England.
From his first poems in 1922 to the publication of his landmark collection On This Island in the mid-1930s, W. H. Auden wrestled with the meaning of Englishness. His early works are prized for their psychological depth, yet Nicholas Jenkins argues that they are political poems as well, illuminating Auden's intuitions about a key aspect of modern experience: national identity. Two historical forces, in particular, haunted the poet: the catastrophe of World War I and the subsequent "rediscovery" of England's rural landscapes by artists and intellectuals.
The Island presents a new picture of Auden, the poet and the man, as he explored a genteel, lyrical form of nationalism during these years. His poems reflect on a world in ruins, while cultivating visions of England as a beautiful—if morally compromised—haven. They also reflect aspects of Auden's personal search for belonging—from his complex relationship with his father, to his quest for literary mentors, to his negotiation of the codes that structured gay life. Yet as Europe veered toward a second immolation, Auden began to realize that poetic myths centered on English identity held little potential. He left the country in 1936 for what became an almost lifelong expatriation, convinced that his role as the voice of Englishness had become an empty one.
Reexamining one of the twentieth century's most moving and controversial poets, The Island is a fresh account of his early works and a striking parable about the politics of modernism. Auden's preoccupations with the vicissitudes of war, the trials of love, and the problems of identity are of their time. Yet they still resonate profoundly today.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 29, 2024
      This exacting study from Jenkins, an English professor at Stanford University, traces the artistic development of poet W.H. Auden (1907–1973) from his first stabs at poetry in 1922 to his departure from England in 1937. The horrors of WWI loom large in Auden’s poetry, Jenkins contends, suggesting that his description of a mouse hiding from a raptor in “The Owl” is meant to evoke a soldier hunted by an enemy sniper. Jenkins’s analysis tends toward the psychoanalytic, as when he expounds on how a phallic reference to a subject’s “adult pen” reflects Freud’s notion that “the fetish is an everyday object,” and how the romance described in “Before this loved one...” conforms with “the conventional Freudian idea that the homosexual falls narcissistically in love with an image of himself at an earlier stage in his sexual development.” Contrary to Auden’s later reputation as an urbane cosmopolitan, Jenkins argues that the young poet gradually turned from modernist iconoclasm to a conservative, nationalist sensibility steeped in Old English prosody. On more than one occasion, Jenkins devotes several paragraphs to unpacking a single two-word phrase in Auden’s poetry, a level of depth that will strain to carry the interest of general readers. This is best suited for literary scholars.

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  • English

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