Skip to main content

Free US delivery on orders $35 or over

Revolution, She Wrote

Historical Fiction and Radical Knowledge in Interwar Europe

Revolution, She Wrote cover

Revolution, She Wrote

Historical Fiction and Radical Knowledge in Interwar Europe

Quantity
Pre-order. Available Aug 06 2026
$108.00 RRP $120.00 Website price saving $12.00 (10%)

Payment for this pre-order will be taken when the item becomes available

Description

This intellectual and literary history explores the entanglement of historical imagination and left-wing politics in interwar Europe.

Contrary to the popular perception of historical continuity and revolutionary action as incompatible, the connections between the two phenomena prove to be as vital and productive as they are messy and complicated. Revolution, She Wrote offers a novel way of studying these phenomena by focussing on three cases from interwar Europe whence the revolutions and revolutionary figures of the past became the subject of historical fiction authored by women. It argues that these works, despite their fictional status, functioned as carriers of radical knowledge.

Stanislawa Przybyszewska (1901–1935) wrote plays about the French Revolution of 1789 that caused unexpected agitation in Poland's theatrical world and beyond. Sylvia Townsend Warner (1893–1978) made a transgressive contribution to the British Cultural Front with her novel set in 1848 Paris. And Olga Forsh (1873–1961) carved out her place among the cultural workers of the new Soviet state by writing histories of the Bolshevik revolution's ancestors. All three authors belonged on the left side of the political spectrum and remained at the periphery to the cultural markets and intellectual milieus in their countries. Their fictionalized revolutions are thus marked, on the one hand, by sympathy and engagement, and on the other, by their ex-centric positions.

Revolution, She Wrote demonstrates the dynamic entanglement of national and pan-European historical cultures, breaking with the defeatist perception of interwar left-wing intellectual activism to advance historical writing as a locus of hope and resistance.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgements
Notes on Translation and Transliteration
Introduction: Writing Revolutionary Histories in Interwar Europe
· From “Interwar” to “Post-revolutionary”: Rethinking Europe of the 1920s and 1930s
· Writing the Past, Contemplating the Future: Historical Fiction as a Radical Genre
· Ex-centric Intellectuals: Three Interwar Lives
1. Olga Forsh: Revolution without liberté
· A writer between Symbolism and Socialist Realism
· Past Revolutionaries in Service of the Present
· The Writer, the Critic, and the State
2. Stanislawa Przybyszewska: Revolution without égalité
· Metaphysics of Progress between Hope and Despair
· Tragedy of the French Revolution: The Limits of Representation
· Making a Revolution on the Polish Stage
3. Sylvia Townsend Warner: Revolution without fraternité
· This History Which is Not One
· Queering 1848: Realist Representation of the Revolutionary Romance
· Lady into Marxist? Reception and Its Vicissitudes
(Revolution without) Conclusion
· Losing Histories: Conceiving Hope from Defeat
· Futures not Past: Political Temporalities of Historical Fiction
· Long Live Indeterminacy? Knowledge out of Ignorance

Bibliography
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published Aug 06 2026
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 272
ISBN 9798765133835
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Ksenia Shmydkaya

Ksenia Shmydkaya is Research Fellow at Tallinn Uni…

Related Titles

Environment: Staging