In this landmark study, John Carey analyzes the elitest views of some of
the most highly respected literary icons of the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. This book, as defined in his preface, "is about the response
of the English literary intelligentsia to the new phenomenon of mass
culture." Readers may be shocked to learn that H.G. Wells liked to think
that this newly emerged "mass" would be eliminated by plague and atomic
bombs; that Yeats wished them to perish in an apocalyptic war against
the educated classes and that D.H. Lawrence visualized a huge lethal
chamber in which they could be exterminated. John Carey's devastating
attack on the intellectuals exposes the loathing which the mass of
humanity ignited in many of the virtual founders of modern culture: G.B.
Shaw, Ezra Pound, James Joyce, E.M. Forster, Virginia Woolf, T.S. Eliot
and others. Professor Carey compares their detestation of common
humanity to Nietzsche, whose philosophy helped create the atmosphere
leading to the rise of Adolph Hitler. Any student of modern literature
and history will find John Carey's incisive book both enlightening and
disturbing, an essential read for a full understanding of where we are
today.