Since âBrexit was partly a cultural event, we have to use our best cultural tools to analyse it, some of which come out of literary studiesâ.
That is the claim of Robert Eaglestone, professor of contemporary literature and thought at Royal Holloway, University of London, who brought together a team of 18 literary scholars, writers and poets for a new collection on Brexit and Literature: Critical and Cultural Perspectives (Routledge), for which all royalties will be donated to
âEnglish studies have always been tied up with ideas about national identity,â Professor Eaglestone explained. âYet most of the academic conversation about Brexit has come from social scientists. Humanities can give us a deeper, rounder pictureâŠWe need to bring our scholarship to bear on this enormous contemporary issue. Literature is kind of messy, just like human beings are.â
Though he admitted that literary studies seldom offered direct âpolicy implicationsâ, Professor Eaglestone was convinced that they can âfeed into our thinking about the nature of communities past, present and future, and help us shape our lives and communitiesâ. Anne Vartyâs chapter in his book about the June 2016 âShore to Shoreâ poetry tour organised by Carol Ann Duffy, he added, gave a sense of literature âcapturing a live wire of feeling, something changing and developing as the tour went through Britainâ.
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At a launch event for the book held at the University of Londonâs Senate House, Professor Eaglestone explored the dangerous way that âBrexit discourse is saturated with memory of the Second World War: Spitfires, White Cliffs, Churchill, poor Churchillian rhetoricâŠthe idea Britain âwas greatest in its history when it stood aloneââ.
Other contributors to the book explored further insights to be gained from literature and literary studies.
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Kristian Shaw, senior lecturer in English literature at the University of Lincoln, recalled being âopenly ridiculedâ by colleagues after a visit to family and friends in the North-East of England led him to âput some money on a Leave result in the referendumâ. He was now working on the genre of âpost-Brexit fictionâ he had named âBrexLitâ and warned against the danger of just âcreat[ing] another leftist echo chamber that neither heals nor speaks to an already fractious nationâ. Yet we were beginning to find novels âgesturing towards more inclusive and diverse forms of public culture, identifying the social divisions affecting the nation â and engaging in a struggle with British society and its prevailing political climateâ. At a time when national culture was being reshaped, it was crucial that literature should retain its role as âa bastion of cultural cosmopolitanismâ.
James Smith, lecturer in English literature at Royal Holloway, University of London, meanwhile, put the case for âa progressive response to Brexitâ which ârefuse[s] to feel hard done byâŠand refuse[s] nostalgia, either for preposterous myths of Britain of the pastâŠor for the alleged consensus that aspired to remove crucial questions from the political realmâ.
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