According to recent studies, modernist writers, far from experiencing what Huyssen calls “an anxiety of contamination” by mass culture, relied on the logic of the marketplace to promote their writings and themselves. An interesting case is that of Wyndham Lewis, who was ready to exploit the avant-garde’s internal differences and rivalries, in the attempt to make a place for himself on the cultural scene of pre-war London, as his tumultuous and short-lived affiliations with Fry’s Omega Workshops and Futurism attest. Lewis, it appears, had mixed feelings towards groups and movements: though aware of the wider visibility “the combination of forces” could confer on his work, he was convinced that art was an individual endeavour. Moreover, he wa...