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The Archaeology of Postwar Childhood in Rose Macaulay’s The World My Wilderness
- Journal of Modern Literature
- Indiana University Press
- Volume 37, Number 3, Spring 2014
- pp. 92-110
- 10.2979/jmodelite.37.3.92
- Article
- Additional Information
The World My Wilderness (1950) is a painful meditation on the social and material ruins of the Second World War. The novel’s chronotope of ruins creates a palimpsest of physical, psychic, and textual dereliction. During the Blitz, air raids uncovered ancient ruins while creating new ones out of present-day buildings and infrastructure. This peculiar archaeological environment resonates with what philosophers have theorized as a ruin’s multidirectional, suspended temporality. Like several other books of “ruin-mapping” in the immediate postwar period, Macaulay’s novel renders this dislocated setting through a cartographic treatment of Blitzed London. Ultimately, the novel complicates conventional ways of reading both the metropolis and the Bildungsroman by emphasizing war’s creation of surrogate habitats, and the residual, destructive effects on youth and maturation.