Men without Art  

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Men without Art (1934) is a book by D. B. Wyndham-Lewis. It is a book of critical essays also. It grew out of a defence of Lewis's own satirical practice in The Apes of God, and puts forward a theory of 'non-moral', or metaphysical, satire. But the book is probably best remembered for one of the first commentaries on Faulkner, and a famous essay on Hemingway.





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