“…Although for Garland such a project ultimately failed, Brown draws attention to a uniquely late nineteenth‐century moment when one “could imagine a cultural field that would be modernist … yet popular, nationalist and populist,” as opposed to the actual history of modernist fiction in the twentieth century, in which an “institutionalized antagonism between [‘high’ and ‘low’ culture] is precisely what obscure[d] populist culture from the aesthetic imagination” (99, 104–05). In an arguably allied fashion, Mark Storey attempts in “Country Matters” to reverse the earlier tendency of modernist critics to regard “regionalist” writers like Garland as merely “quaintly anachronistic” by recovering those moments in their novels that register social and political conflict, “buried but still‐glowing embers of the clamorous and transformative social world from which the novel emerges” (192). It is as though Storey adopts a perspective that actively looks for and thereby supplies the socially progressive bite otherwise missing in such fiction, a kind of critical salvage operation that Brown sees as an only marginally effective strategy of contemporary “politicized criticism” (even as it seems to be one of its only options), which tries to “recuperate ‘popular literature’ and ‘low culture’ for its subversive potential” (91)…”