A certain state of mind held together the peoples who went into the Great War: a solid certitude—of life and work, nature and culture, of class, duty and honour. Four blood-soaked years exploded those certainties. Yet, what the war brought to the brink of a crisis had been confronting writers and artists since the turn of the century: the alienating and overwhelming nature of modern urban life, as seen through industry, machines and speed, and a growing internationalism keeping pace with growing consumerism. The known world slipping away thus, writers and artists reacted with a frantic search for alternative modes of representation. While the poetry of Mallarme, Eliot, Pound, Rilke and Apollinaire sought to break out of traditional metrical norms to experiment with vers libre, in prose, Henry James, Conrad, Musil, Proust, Woolf and Italo Svevo sought to represent human subjectivity and consciousness, emotion and perception through new techniques, like a highly self-conscious reflexiveness. While Proust, James and Musil would use the long, explicatory sentence, Dorothy Richardson, Joyce, Woolf and later Faulkner used interior monologue, stream of consciousness and the free indirect style for the same purpose. If 1929 was to be annus mirabilis of the Great War novel, 1922 saw a surge of Modernist writing: Joyce’s Ulysses, Eliot’s The Waste Land, Woolf’s Jacob’s Room and Katherine Mansfield’s The Garden Party. For some writers, the crisis in civilisation could only be represented by deadpan semi-bureaucratese, like what Jarioslav Hasek used for The Good Soldier Svejk. The resultant paradox-laden comicality would be sharpened later in the decade into grim alternative realities by Kafka. More significantly, as modernists experimented with avant garde techniques, a profound shift occurred in the English prose style after the end of the war: the Latinate, perfectly balanced sentences imbued with gravitas and grandeur, acquired a new, aerodynamic lightness and a freer, lyrical and elastic openness. Its exemplars were the Americans Sherwood Anderson, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway, later followed by Britons Aldous Huxley, Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene. We are in its thrall still.