The book provides a complementary view of modernism by investigating Anglo-American little magazines published in Europe in the 1920s and 1930s. Addressing symbolic and practical aspects of physical location and international themes in the little reviews, it highlights the infrastructure of modernism - networks, finances and genealogies. The authors link activities, strategies and negotiations with the creation of modernism as we know it, as magazine editors are shown to be highly conscious of their role as canon-makers. In this rendition, modernism is intrinsically linked with its agents and practices and pushes the dividing lines between narrow elite culture and wider readerships, as well as between cosmopolites and tourists.
«Celia Aijmer Rydsjö's (University of Gothenburg) and AnnKatrin Jonsson's (University College of Telemark) Exiles in Print: Little Magazines in Europe, 1921-1938 may seem a small and modest book, but it is a rich and valuable addition to any research library on periodical publications from the modernist period.»
(Kristof Van Gansen, Journal of European Periodical Studies, 1.1 2016)
(Kristof Van Gansen, Journal of European Periodical Studies, 1.1 2016)