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Chapter 1 - ‘Changing the changing’: Wyndham Lewis and the new modernist ascendancy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 June 2009

Rod Rosenquist
Affiliation:
Newbold College, Berkshire
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Summary

‘And, as to “progress” or “change”, there are millions of extremely different forms available. You should … wish: and you should steadily oppose what you do not wish.’

Wyndham Lewis, Paleface

In the early 1940s, as Wyndham Lewis found refuge from the Second World War in North America, a young acquaintance named Marshall McLuhan began to find portrait-sitters and lecture appointments for the ageing modernist. Regarding one of the first engagements, a lecture for the Wednesday Club in St Louis, McLuhan would write:

As for topic at the W.C. – ‘Personalities in the world of modern art and letters.’ Yes, frankly, they want anecdotes about ‘Long-haired people I have known.’ You can please them completely, simply by making it a chat about familiar names – Yeats, Joyce, Eliot, Picasso, Augustus John, T. E. Lawrence etc. Let it embrace more than one field. A musician wouldn't be amiss.

McLuhan would prove himself to be a valuable ally for Lewis, generating ‘publicity’ and organising receptions for the artist – complete with suggestions to turn The Vulgar Streak into an ‘American bestseller’ by getting Basil Rathbone to play Penhale in a not-yet-existent Hollywood production. Lewis himself was not unaware of the complex relationship between his own high cultural artistic position and the mass culture forms that intrigued McLuhan.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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