Armed with Madness explained

Armed with Madness
Author:Mary Butts
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Modernist
Publisher:Wishart & Co (UK)
Albert & Charles Boni (US)
Release Date:1928
Media Type:Print (hardback & paperback)
Isbn:0-929701-18-6
Isbn Note:(McPherson Paperback Reprint in 'The Taverner Novels')

Armed with Madness is a novel by Mary Butts first published in 1928 that incorporates Modernism and Psychoanalytical Criticism.

A variation on the grail myth, concerned with ritualism and the relationships of a group of young bohemians living in rural isolation on the south-west coast of England, it is recognized as Mary Butts's most significant contribution to literary modernism, and has been called a "masterpiece of Modernist prose".[1]

Publication history

Completed in 1927, the novel was first published in the 1928 edition, by Wishart & Co, London, with three engraved plates by Jean Cocteau. It has since been reprinted several times, recently by McPherson, with Butts's 1932 novel The Death of Felicity Taverner, as The Taverner Novels in its 1992 and 1998 editions, incorporating an introduction by Paul West. It was published singly as a Penguin Modern Classic in 1998.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Rainey. Lawrence. Good Things: Pederasty and Jazz and Opium and Research. London Review of Books. 16 July 1998. 20. 14. 14–17.
  2. Web site: Goodreads listing for Armed with Madness, Penguin Modern Classics edition. Goodreads.com. 20 October 2017.