This book examines the problems faced by innovative writers working in a late modernist era dominated by Joyce, Eliot and Pound.How does one create an original work when the 'new' has already been established? Focusing on the writers and poets who emerged after Modernism's high-water mark year of 1922, this study considers problems of value and innovation in an era already dominated by the likes of Joyce, Eliot and Pound.How does one create an original work when the 'new' has already been established? Focusing on the writers and poets who emerged after Modernism's high-water mark year of 1922, this study considers problems of value and innovation in an era already dominated by the likes of Joyce, Eliot and Pound.Modernism remains deeply connected to ideas of innovation, and this has created problems for successive generations of writers. For example, how does one create an original work when the 'new' has already been established, marketed and institutionalised? Rod Rosenquist's study focuses on the writers and poets who emerged after Modernism's high-water mark year of 1922, in which Ulysses, The Waste Land and the early Cantos were published. Seeking to refine our own understanding of the high modernists through the frequent difficulties encountered by the generation that succeeded them, this study discusses issues of cultural value, the relationship of history to innovation, and the market for new works in an era already dominated by the likes of Joyce, Eliot and Pound. Containing illuminating examinations of Wyndham Lewis, Laura Riding and Henry Miller, this study will be invaluable reading for those interested in Modernism and its complicated legacy.Introduction: the modernist latecomer and 'permanent novelty'; 1. 'Changing the changing': Wyndham Lewis and the New Modernist ascendancy; 2. Laura Riding, modernist fashion and the individual talent; 3. The immolation of the artist: Henry Miller and the 'hot-house geniuses'; 4. Investing in the modernist legacy: Obló<