This keynote lecture takes us on a voyage relating to the life and works of the late-modernist writer, Malcolm Lowry (1909-57), who is famous for his masterpiece, Under the Volcano (1947). The scale of his perceptions and reflective consciousness – which is brilliantly showcased through his account of the Mexican Day of the Dead festival - necessitates an interdisciplinary journey of discovery. This paper contributes to the development of a psychogeographic and historical framework for the investigation and evaluation of modernism’s international dimensions and multicultural interconnectedness. It provides a foundation for the consideration of the influence of cultures and civilizations – east and west, ancient and modern – on modernist aut...
This paper evaluates the nature and significance of Nigel Foxcroft’s current research into the world...
Despite the abundance of intertextual credits to Russian writers, film directors, and intellectuals ...
On the basis of a recent field-trip to Mexico, this paper advances the thesis of my 2009 Malcolm Low...
Renowned for his masterpiece, Under the Volcano (1947), the late-modernist writer, Malcolm Lowry (19...
This paper provides an intercontinental, cross-cultural, multi-disciplinary framework for an analysi...
This paper provides an intercontinental, cross-cultural, multi-disciplinary framework for an analysi...
This study of shamanic and psychogeographic influences on the work of Malcolm Lowry considers psycho...
Malcolm Lowry’s semi-autobiographical modernist novel, Under the Volcano (1947) journeys us back to ...
In tracing the evolution of the cosmic consciousness of Malcolm Lowry (1909–57), a prominent English...
In tracing the evolution of the cosmic consciousness of Malcolm Lowry (1909-57), a prominently signi...
This paper presents Malcolm Lowry (1909-57) as a Modernist writer under the influence of primitivism...
This paper considers connections, in Malcolm Lowry's works, between the Mexican Day of the Dead fest...
Social breakdown in many communities has resulted in growing interest in seeking alternative and mor...
In Under the Volcano (1947) Malcolm Lowry (1909-57) presents us with a Faustian image of a British e...
In reinterpreting his vision of the world, this paper investigates international influences – especi...
This paper evaluates the nature and significance of Nigel Foxcroft’s current research into the world...
Despite the abundance of intertextual credits to Russian writers, film directors, and intellectuals ...
On the basis of a recent field-trip to Mexico, this paper advances the thesis of my 2009 Malcolm Low...
Renowned for his masterpiece, Under the Volcano (1947), the late-modernist writer, Malcolm Lowry (19...
This paper provides an intercontinental, cross-cultural, multi-disciplinary framework for an analysi...
This paper provides an intercontinental, cross-cultural, multi-disciplinary framework for an analysi...
This study of shamanic and psychogeographic influences on the work of Malcolm Lowry considers psycho...
Malcolm Lowry’s semi-autobiographical modernist novel, Under the Volcano (1947) journeys us back to ...
In tracing the evolution of the cosmic consciousness of Malcolm Lowry (1909–57), a prominent English...
In tracing the evolution of the cosmic consciousness of Malcolm Lowry (1909-57), a prominently signi...
This paper presents Malcolm Lowry (1909-57) as a Modernist writer under the influence of primitivism...
This paper considers connections, in Malcolm Lowry's works, between the Mexican Day of the Dead fest...
Social breakdown in many communities has resulted in growing interest in seeking alternative and mor...
In Under the Volcano (1947) Malcolm Lowry (1909-57) presents us with a Faustian image of a British e...
In reinterpreting his vision of the world, this paper investigates international influences – especi...
This paper evaluates the nature and significance of Nigel Foxcroft’s current research into the world...
Despite the abundance of intertextual credits to Russian writers, film directors, and intellectuals ...
On the basis of a recent field-trip to Mexico, this paper advances the thesis of my 2009 Malcolm Low...