A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day

Elizabeth Bowen’s The Heat of the Day (1949) is a novel permeated with the architectural ruins of the Second World War. This article is concerned with the shock effects the war had on Bowen’s understanding of the material world and the resultant implications for the late modernist narrative strategi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zimmerman, Emma
Format: Article
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36672/
_version_ 1848795327139676160
author Zimmerman, Emma
author_facet Zimmerman, Emma
author_sort Zimmerman, Emma
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Elizabeth Bowen’s The Heat of the Day (1949) is a novel permeated with the architectural ruins of the Second World War. This article is concerned with the shock effects the war had on Bowen’s understanding of the material world and the resultant implications for the late modernist narrative strategies she employs in The Heat of the Day. Drawing on theoretical understandings of space and place from cultural geography, I focus critical attention on the marked materialities of the novel. I consider the extent to which Bowen’s representation of the domestic interior resists the notion of the Heideggerian dwelling place and instead exposes the stark deracination of the wartime individual. I also draw connections with the strained, disjunctive style of the narrative – a style that Bowen (1950) explains is ‘to a certain extent intended. I wanted […] a smashed up pattern with its fragments invecting on one another’ (238) – arguing that it shares continuities with the stylistic anxiousness of early modernism. Bringing these points of focus into dialogue with recent debates about wartime literature and the periodization of modernism, I show how Bowen (re)constructs, out of the wartime ruins, a deeply unsettling late modernist portrait of the fractured domestic landscape of 1940s London.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:30:19Z
format Article
id nottingham-36672
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:30:19Z
publishDate 2015
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-366722020-05-04T17:12:06Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36672/ A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day Zimmerman, Emma Elizabeth Bowen’s The Heat of the Day (1949) is a novel permeated with the architectural ruins of the Second World War. This article is concerned with the shock effects the war had on Bowen’s understanding of the material world and the resultant implications for the late modernist narrative strategies she employs in The Heat of the Day. Drawing on theoretical understandings of space and place from cultural geography, I focus critical attention on the marked materialities of the novel. I consider the extent to which Bowen’s representation of the domestic interior resists the notion of the Heideggerian dwelling place and instead exposes the stark deracination of the wartime individual. I also draw connections with the strained, disjunctive style of the narrative – a style that Bowen (1950) explains is ‘to a certain extent intended. I wanted […] a smashed up pattern with its fragments invecting on one another’ (238) – arguing that it shares continuities with the stylistic anxiousness of early modernism. Bringing these points of focus into dialogue with recent debates about wartime literature and the periodization of modernism, I show how Bowen (re)constructs, out of the wartime ruins, a deeply unsettling late modernist portrait of the fractured domestic landscape of 1940s London. 2015-07-31 Article PeerReviewed Zimmerman, Emma (2015) A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day. Literary Geographies, 1 (1). pp. 42-61. ISSN 2397-1797 Ruins; Materiality; Elizabeth Bowen; Late-modernism; Wartime; Home http://www.literarygeographies.net/index.php/LitGeogs/article/view/1-6
spellingShingle Ruins; Materiality; Elizabeth Bowen; Late-modernism; Wartime; Home
Zimmerman, Emma
A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day
title A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day
title_full A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day
title_fullStr A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day
title_full_unstemmed A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day
title_short A "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in Elizabeth Bowen’s The heat of the day
title_sort "tottering lace-like architecture of ruins”: the wartime home in elizabeth bowen’s the heat of the day
topic Ruins; Materiality; Elizabeth Bowen; Late-modernism; Wartime; Home
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36672/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36672/