Maycroft, Neil
(2004)
Satirising the bourgeois worldview: Patrick Hamilton’s Impromptu in Moribundia.
Capital & Class: Special Issue on Cultural Production, Consumption and Resistance, No 84, October 2004.
(84).
pp. 77-82.
ISSN 0309-8168
Satirising the bourgeois worldview: Patrick Hamilton’s Impromptu in Moribundia | This paper was originally published as ‘Satirising the bourgeois worldview: Patrick Hamilton’s Impromptu in Moribundia’, in Capital & Class: Special Issue on Cultural Production, Consumption and Resistance, No 84, October 2004. | | ![[img]](http://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/style/images/fileicons/application_pdf.png) [Download] |
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Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
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Abstract
As well as being a cultural product itself, literature provides a means for the critical interrogation of the processes of cultural production and consumption in class-structured capitalist society. Realist narrative, Utopian speculation and dystopian conjecture have all been used to good effect. So, too, have satire and fable, and these come together in a neglected and largely forgotten novel from 1939, Impromptu in Moribundia, written by the bourgeois Marxist Patrick Hamilton. Though dated in many ways, and clearly rooted in a particular social and political context, this fabulous tale, nevertheless, retains interest for those wishing to critique the production of the bourgeois cultural worldview.
Additional Information: | As well as being a cultural product itself, literature provides a means for the critical interrogation of the processes of cultural production and consumption in class-structured capitalist society. Realist narrative, Utopian speculation and dystopian conjecture have all been used to good effect. So, too, have satire and fable, and these come together in a neglected and largely forgotten novel from 1939, Impromptu in Moribundia, written by the bourgeois Marxist Patrick Hamilton. Though dated in many ways, and clearly rooted in a particular social and political context, this fabulous tale, nevertheless, retains interest for those wishing to critique the production of the bourgeois cultural worldview. |
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Keywords: | Patrick Hamilton, Marxism and literature, Moribundia, Ideological inversion, maycroft498 |
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Subjects: | R European Languages, Literature and related subjects > R990 European Languages, Literature and related subjects not elsewhere classified |
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Divisions: | College of Arts > School of Architecture & Design > School of Architecture & Design (Design) |
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ID Code: | 2063 |
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Deposited On: | 18 Nov 2009 12:24 |
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