The introduction describes H.D.’s traumatic experience of World War II and its aftermath, documenting her heightened interest in global politics from the late 1930s to the late 1940s, as well as her abandonment of a lifelong pacifist stance in the face of rising Nazism. Taking into account the scope of her entire career, the Introduction suggests a shift from static to more dynamic modes of writing, culminating in the historical fiction and epic poetry that dominate the postwar years. It contextualizes her work within the context of scholarship on late modernism, including other work by women of the period on gender and imperialism, and concludes with a summary of the book’s chapters.
Daniel (2004). Cross-lingual searching and visualization for greek and latin and old norse texts. In: Proceedings of the 2004 joint ACM/IEEE conference on Digital libraries-JCDL 04 JCDL 04, p. 383. For guidance on citations see FAQs.
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