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10 The London Mercury (1919–39) and Other Moderns
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Published:May 2013
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Abstract
This chapter discusses the history of The London Mercury under the editorship of editor, John Collings Squire. The magazine experienced three phases in its twenty-year history. The first lasted from 1919 to 1931, when Squire maintained firm editorial control and adroitly defended his positions on art and neo-Georgian values. The second was from 1931 to 1934, as the magazine experienced a marked deterioration in editorial quality, ending with Squire's ouster from his post. The third and final incarnation occurred from 1934 to 1939 under the energetic editorship of Rolfe Arnold Scott-James, who made the magazine look like something recognizably and, by this time, even traditionally ‘modernist’. The longevity of The London Mercury on the British literary scene, compared to the more famous and scintillating ‘little magazines’, confirms its place as an important site of literary production between 1919 and 1939.
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