Rose Macaulay and Propaganda

IF 0.1 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
J. Purdon
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Abstract

The novelist Rose Macaulay (1881–1958) had direct professional experience of Britain's secret propaganda operation during the First World War. She was among the first British novelists to take propaganda seriously as a subject for fiction, and wrote insightfully about its methods and its social implications. Moreover, her long career illuminates both the continuity and the development of the British state's clandestine efforts to shape public opinion at home and abroad, from the beginnings of systematic, state-directed propaganda in the First World War to the more diffuse strategies of early Cold War anti-communism. Despite her close connections to propaganda in both world wars, however – and notwithstanding the interest her fiction very frequently takes in the worlds of official information, disinformation, and espionage – Macaulay has hardly figured in recent scholarship on the links between literature and national information systems. This article argues that Macaulay approached the challenge of reconciling propaganda and literature differently from many of her modernist contemporaries, refusing to abandon the idea of fiction as a persuasive and socially-engaged form of imaginative writing. If this position made her an outlier in the climate of reaction against propaganda which followed the First World War, it would, by the early years of the Cold War, seem much more tenable. In its first half, the article establishes Macaulay's bona fides as a participant in Britain's wartime propaganda establishment, and describes the impression this experience left on her early fiction. It then turns to Macaulay's final novel, The Towers of Trebizond, in which religious propaganda and anti-communist rhetoric combine, to great comic effect, in the febrile atmosphere of the Cold War middle east.
Rose Macaulay和Propaganda
小说家罗斯·麦考利(1881-1958)对第一次世界大战期间英国的秘密宣传行动有直接的专业经验。她是第一批把宣传作为小说题材认真对待的英国小说家之一,并对宣传的方法和社会影响进行了深刻的探讨。此外,她漫长的职业生涯阐明了英国政府在国内外塑造公众舆论的秘密努力的连续性和发展,从第一次世界大战中系统的、国家指导的宣传开始,到冷战早期更分散的反共战略。尽管麦考利与两次世界大战中的宣传有密切的联系,尽管她的小说经常引起官方信息、虚假信息和间谍活动的兴趣,但在最近的文学与国家信息系统之间联系的学术研究中,麦考利几乎没有出现。本文认为,麦考利与她同时代的许多现代主义作家不同,她面对的是协调宣传与文学的挑战,她拒绝放弃小说作为一种有说服力和社会参与的想象性写作形式的理念。如果说这一立场使她在第一次世界大战后反对宣传的氛围中成为一个异类,那么到冷战初期,这种立场似乎要站得住得多。文章的前半部分确立了麦考利作为英国战时宣传机构参与者的真实身份,并描述了这一经历给她早期小说留下的印象。然后,我们转向麦考利的最后一部小说《特拉比松塔》,在这部小说中,宗教宣传和反共言论结合在一起,在冷战中东的狂热气氛中产生了巨大的喜剧效果。
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来源期刊
Modernist Cultures
Modernist Cultures HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
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