This book understands the way that some Modernist texts put themselves together as a way of pulling themselves apart. In this volume, Beci Carver offers a new way of reading Modernist novels
and poems , by drawing attention to the anomalies that make them difficult to summarise or simplify. Carver proposes that rather than trying to find the shapes of narrative or argument in their
writing, the ’Granular Modernists’ - namely, Joseph Conrad, William Gerhardie, Evelyn Waugh, Henry Green, T.S. Eliot, W.H. Auden, and Samuel Beckett - experiment in certain of their works in
finding the shapelessness of a moment in history that increasingly confidently called itself ’modern’, which was to call itself shapeless. The project of Modernism in the late nineteenth and
the first half of the twentieth century, was to find a story to tell about an era full of beginnings. The project of ’Granular Modernism’ was to find a way of turning the inchoateness of the
modern moment into art.