{"title":"Hubert Crackanthorpe: Selected Writings ed. by William Greenslade and Emanuela Ettorre (review)","authors":"","doi":"10.1353/mlr.2023.a907861","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Reviewed by: Hubert Crackanthorpe: Selected Writings ed. by William Greenslade and Emanuela Ettorre Jessica Gossling Hubert Crackanthorpe: Selected Writings. Ed. by William Greenslade and Emanuela Ettorre. (MHRA Jewelled Tortoise, 7; MHRA Critical Texts, 71) Cambridge: Modern Humanities Research Association. 2020. viii+ 414 pp. £34.99. IBSN 978–1–78188–966–4. Hubert Montague Crackanthorpe (1870–1896) is well known among those interested in the fin de siècle, although unfortunately this is more to do with his mysterious death by drowning in Paris at the age of twenty-six than for his writing, which has remained predominantly out of print. Hubert Crackanthorpe: Selected Writings—the seventh volume iii Stefano Evangelista and Catherine Maxwell's Jewelled Tortoise series—is therefore a much-needed edition that successfully presents the range and importance of Crackanthorpe's writing. The volume comprises two critical introductory essays by the editors, a selection of Crackanthorpe's fiction and non-fiction, and a comprehensive bibliographic survey. William Greenslade's essay, 'Life, Context and Criticism', begins with the details of Crackanthorpe's death and the discovery of his decomposed body, recognizable only by his signet ring, before expanding on his connections with some of the most influential literary figures of the day (Henry James, William Butler Yeats, and Arthur Symons, to name a few), his establishment of the short-lived journal The Albermale: A Monthly Review (1892), and his lifelong interest in French culture and writing. As discussed by Emanuela Ettorre in 'The Stories and the Prose [End Page 619] Poems', this context enables a deeper understanding of Crackanthorpe's attraction to challenging, Zolaesque subject matter, and the artistic experimentation that led to him being considered 'as one of the exponents of \"new realism'\" (p. 35) at the beginning of his career. In three years, this realism rapidly developed into a darker and uneasy impressionism—a progression that is foregrounded in the organization of the short stories and prose poems in Selected Works. The first part, 'Fiction', takes a chronological approach to Crackanthorpe's more realist short-story collections. It includes six of the seven stories in Wreckage: Seven Studies (1893); all but 'Yew Trees and Peacocks' in Sentimental Studies (1895); two of the six in A Set of Village Tales (1895); and all three of the stories in Last Studies, collected and published posthumously in 1897. As justified by the editors, the omissions from these collections provide the space to present three less familiar short stories in the second part, 'Uncollected Fiction'. This is the first time 'A Latter-Day Highwayman (An Adventure in Miniature)' has been published since the original newspaper version in 1896. In this short story, the narrator recalls the night he spent sheltering from a snowstorm in a disused cattleshed with an inept highwayman who 'resembled a decadent Father Christmas' (p. 366). It is an excellent example of Crackanthorpe's off-kilter realism, dark humour, and, as Ettorre puts it, his 'deconstruction of the clichés of contemporary representations of degeneracy' (p. 59). The third section is focused on a selection of the forty-one 'impressionistic fragments' (p. 35) collected in Vignettes (1896). In a way that is reminiscent of Symons's London Nights (1895), ephemeral urban spaces and experiences—such as the crowd after mass, fleeting crepuscular encounters, and the streets of London and Paris—are interwoven with pastoral countryside scenes and eroticized descriptions of European holiday destinations. This collection has a disconcerting effect, described perfectly by Lionel Johnson as 'a note of distrust in the stability of happiness […] that this delight and that pleasure are fatally precarious' (p. 64), and offers a fascinating glimpse into the direction that Crackanthorpe's writing may have taken. If I have one criticism of Selected Works, it is that only sixteen of these Vignettes have been included. The fourth part, 'Non-Fiction', comprises two earlier essays by Crackanthorpe (one on Zola from 1892 and another on contemporary fiction from 1894), and an interesting letter on literary freedom from 1894. The Appendix and notes are excellent. Overall, Selected Writings is an accessible introduction to Crackanthorpe that makes proper consideration of his work alongside others of the 'Tragic Generation' possible. Highly recommended. Jessica Gossling...","PeriodicalId":45399,"journal":{"name":"MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW","volume":"27 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/mlr.2023.a907861","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Reviewed by: Hubert Crackanthorpe: Selected Writings ed. by William Greenslade and Emanuela Ettorre Jessica Gossling Hubert Crackanthorpe: Selected Writings. Ed. by William Greenslade and Emanuela Ettorre. (MHRA Jewelled Tortoise, 7; MHRA Critical Texts, 71) Cambridge: Modern Humanities Research Association. 2020. viii+ 414 pp. £34.99. IBSN 978–1–78188–966–4. Hubert Montague Crackanthorpe (1870–1896) is well known among those interested in the fin de siècle, although unfortunately this is more to do with his mysterious death by drowning in Paris at the age of twenty-six than for his writing, which has remained predominantly out of print. Hubert Crackanthorpe: Selected Writings—the seventh volume iii Stefano Evangelista and Catherine Maxwell's Jewelled Tortoise series—is therefore a much-needed edition that successfully presents the range and importance of Crackanthorpe's writing. The volume comprises two critical introductory essays by the editors, a selection of Crackanthorpe's fiction and non-fiction, and a comprehensive bibliographic survey. William Greenslade's essay, 'Life, Context and Criticism', begins with the details of Crackanthorpe's death and the discovery of his decomposed body, recognizable only by his signet ring, before expanding on his connections with some of the most influential literary figures of the day (Henry James, William Butler Yeats, and Arthur Symons, to name a few), his establishment of the short-lived journal The Albermale: A Monthly Review (1892), and his lifelong interest in French culture and writing. As discussed by Emanuela Ettorre in 'The Stories and the Prose [End Page 619] Poems', this context enables a deeper understanding of Crackanthorpe's attraction to challenging, Zolaesque subject matter, and the artistic experimentation that led to him being considered 'as one of the exponents of "new realism'" (p. 35) at the beginning of his career. In three years, this realism rapidly developed into a darker and uneasy impressionism—a progression that is foregrounded in the organization of the short stories and prose poems in Selected Works. The first part, 'Fiction', takes a chronological approach to Crackanthorpe's more realist short-story collections. It includes six of the seven stories in Wreckage: Seven Studies (1893); all but 'Yew Trees and Peacocks' in Sentimental Studies (1895); two of the six in A Set of Village Tales (1895); and all three of the stories in Last Studies, collected and published posthumously in 1897. As justified by the editors, the omissions from these collections provide the space to present three less familiar short stories in the second part, 'Uncollected Fiction'. This is the first time 'A Latter-Day Highwayman (An Adventure in Miniature)' has been published since the original newspaper version in 1896. In this short story, the narrator recalls the night he spent sheltering from a snowstorm in a disused cattleshed with an inept highwayman who 'resembled a decadent Father Christmas' (p. 366). It is an excellent example of Crackanthorpe's off-kilter realism, dark humour, and, as Ettorre puts it, his 'deconstruction of the clichés of contemporary representations of degeneracy' (p. 59). The third section is focused on a selection of the forty-one 'impressionistic fragments' (p. 35) collected in Vignettes (1896). In a way that is reminiscent of Symons's London Nights (1895), ephemeral urban spaces and experiences—such as the crowd after mass, fleeting crepuscular encounters, and the streets of London and Paris—are interwoven with pastoral countryside scenes and eroticized descriptions of European holiday destinations. This collection has a disconcerting effect, described perfectly by Lionel Johnson as 'a note of distrust in the stability of happiness […] that this delight and that pleasure are fatally precarious' (p. 64), and offers a fascinating glimpse into the direction that Crackanthorpe's writing may have taken. If I have one criticism of Selected Works, it is that only sixteen of these Vignettes have been included. The fourth part, 'Non-Fiction', comprises two earlier essays by Crackanthorpe (one on Zola from 1892 and another on contemporary fiction from 1894), and an interesting letter on literary freedom from 1894. The Appendix and notes are excellent. Overall, Selected Writings is an accessible introduction to Crackanthorpe that makes proper consideration of his work alongside others of the 'Tragic Generation' possible. Highly recommended. Jessica Gossling...
期刊介绍:
With an unbroken publication record since 1905, its 1248 pages are divided between articles, predominantly on medieval and modern literature, in the languages of continental Europe, together with English (including the United States and the Commonwealth), Francophone Africa and Canada, and Latin America. In addition, MLR reviews over five hundred books each year The MLR Supplement The Modern Language Review was founded in 1905 and has included well over 3,000 articles and some 20,000 book reviews. This supplement to Volume 100 is published by the Modern Humanities Research Association in celebration of the centenary of its flagship journal.