Abstract

This article considers why Warner’s writing has been undervalued, in particular taking issue with the argument that her works are too radically disparate to be discussed as an oeuvre. It argues that one path through her writings – a ‘handle to get hold of the bundle’ in William Empson’s phrase – is the idea of ‘the possibilities of freedom’, a topic broad enough to address a good deal in Warner’s writings but specific enough to bring some focus. ‘The possibilities of freedom’ – as against ‘freedom’ alone – points both ways, both to what is possible and conversely to the limits of the possible. The essay follows this theme and some of its variations through the six decades and several genres of Warner’s writing life, discussing in particular ‘The Young Sailor’, Lolly Willowes, Opus 7, ‘To Come So Far’ and ‘Oxenhope’. It concludes that we should see her as in no way a quiet, removed stylist but instead as a figure of vigorous cultural engagements, an intellectual contemporary of writings such as Bertrand Russell’s Proposed Roads to Freedom (1918), Sartre’s Les chemins de la liberté (1945–49) and Hannah Arendt’s essay ‘What is Freedom?’ (1961).

Highlights

  • My thanks to the UCL Institute of Advanced Studies for hosting this event, to UCL Press for providing the reception and above all to the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society for the invitation to give this biennial lecture

  • This article considers why Warner’s writing has been undervalued, in particular taking issue with the argument that her works are too radically disparate to be discussed as an oeuvre. It argues that one path through her writings – a ‘handle to get hold of the bundle’ in William Empson’s phrase – is the idea of ‘the possibilities of freedom’, a topic broad enough to address a good deal in Warner’s writings but specific enough to bring some focus

  • In an Oxford Handbook chapter in 2016 Maud Ellmann, my predecessor as Warner Society lecturer, wrote that ‘Most scholarship on Sylvia Townsend Warner begins with a kind of ritual lament about the critical neglect that has condemned her writing to obscurity.’

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Summary

The Journal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society

Sylvia Townsend Warner and the Possibilities of Freedom: The Sylvia Townsend Warner Society Lecture 2019. The Journal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society, 2020, 20(1), pp. Peer Review: This article has been peer-reviewed through the journal’s single-blind peer review, where the reviewers are anonymised during review. Open Access: The Journal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society is a peer-reviewed open-access journal

Sy lv i a To wnsend Wa rnerandthePo ss ibilitiesofFreedom
Warner and freedom
Lolly Willowes and Opus Seven
Full Text
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