Poetry in Pieces
Title | Poetry in Pieces PDF eBook |
Author | Michelle Clayton |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 682 |
Release | 2011-01-10 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0520948289 |
Set against the cultural and political backdrop of interwar Europe and the Americas, Poetry in Pieces is the first major study of the Peruvian poet César Vallejo (1892–1938) to appear in English in more than thirty years. Vallejo lived and wrote in two distinct settings—Peru and Paris—which were continually crisscrossed by new developments in aesthetics, politics, and practices of everyday life; his poetry and prose therefore need to be read in connection with modernity in all its forms and spaces. Michelle Clayton combines close readings of Vallejo’s writings with cultural, historical, and theoretical analysis, connecting Vallejo—and Latin American poetry—to the broader panorama of international modernism and the avant-garde, and to writers and artists such as Rainer Maria Rilke, James Joyce, Georges Bataille, and Charlie Chaplin. Poetry in Pieces sheds new light on one of the key figures in twentieth-century Latin American literature, while exploring ways of rethinking the parameters of international lyric modernity.
On Pain of Speech
Title | On Pain of Speech PDF eBook |
Author | Dina Al-Kassim |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 305 |
Release | 2010-02-08 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0520945794 |
On Pain of Speech tracks the literary rant, an expression of provocation and resistance that imagines the power to speak in its own name where no such right is granted. Focusing on the "politics of address," Dina Al-Kassim views the rant through the lens of Michel Foucault's notion of the biopolitical subject and finds that its abject address is an essential yet overlooked feature of modernism. Deftly approaching disparate fields—decadent modernism, queer studies, subjection, critical psychoanalysis, and postcolonial avant-garde—and encompassing both Euro-American and Francophone Arabic modernisms, she offers an ambitious theoretical perspective on the ongoing redefinition of modernism. She includes readings of Jane Bowles, Abdelwahab Meddeb, and Oscar Wilde, and invokes a wide range of ideas, including those of Theodor Adorno, Sigmund Freud, Jacques Lacan, Judith Butler, Jean Laplanche, and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick.
Contested Pasts
Title | Contested Pasts PDF eBook |
Author | Katharine Hodgkin |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 508 |
Release | 2003-09-02 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1134448244 |
This inter-disciplinary volume demonstrates, from a range of perspectives, the complex cultural work and struggles over meaning that lie at the heart of what we call memory. In the last decade, a focus on memory in the human sciences has encouraged new approaches to the study of the past. As the humanities and social sciences have put into question their own claims to objectivity, authority and universality, memory has appeared to offer a way of engaging with knowledge of the past as inevitably partial, subjective and local. At the same time, memory and memorial practices have become sites of contestation, and the politics of memory are increasingly prominent.
The Cosmic Time of Empire
Title | The Cosmic Time of Empire PDF eBook |
Author | Adam Barrows |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 224 |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 0520260996 |
Combining original historical research with literary analysis, Adam Barrows takes a provocative look at the creation of world standard time in 1884 and rethinks the significance of this remarkable moment in modernism for both the processes of imperialism and for modern literature. As representatives from twenty-four nations argued over adopting the Prime Meridian, and thereby measuring time in relation to Greenwich, England, writers began experimenting with new ways of representing human temporality. Barrows finds this experimentation in works as varied as Victorian adventure novels, high modernist texts, and South Asian novels—including the work of James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, H. Rider Haggard, Bram Stoker, Rudyard Kipling, and Joseph Conrad. Demonstrating the investment of modernist writing in the problems of geopolitics and in the public discourse of time, Barrows argues that it is possible, and productive, to rethink the politics of modernism through the politics of time.
Discursos leidos ante la Real Academia Hispano-Americana en la recepción pública, el día 26 de julio de 1915
Title | Discursos leidos ante la Real Academia Hispano-Americana en la recepción pública, el día 26 de julio de 1915 PDF eBook |
Author | Eugenio Domaica y Martínez de Doroño |
Publisher | |
Pages | 44 |
Release | 1915 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Spanish Romanticism and the Uses of History
Title | Spanish Romanticism and the Uses of History PDF eBook |
Author | Derek Flitter |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Pages | 272 |
Release | 2024-11-01 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1040281311 |
Flitter examines those narratives within the intellectual parameters that defined them, probing the conceptual strategies by which writers represented history.
Moses and Multiculturalism
Title | Moses and Multiculturalism PDF eBook |
Author | Barbara Johnson |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 126 |
Release | 2010-02-25 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0520262549 |
Countering impressions of Moses reinforced by Sigmund Freud in his epoch-making Moses and Monotheism, this concise, engaging work begins with the perception that the story of Moses is at once the most nationalist and the most multicultural of all foundation narratives. Weaving together various texts—biblical passages, philosophy, poems, novels, opera, and movies—Barbara Johnson explores how the story of Moses has been appropriated, reimagined, and transmitted across cultures and historical moments. But she finds that already in the Bible, the story of Moses is a multicultural story, the story of someone who functions well in a world to which he, unbeknownst to the casual observer, does not belong. Using the Moses story as a lens through which to view questions at the heart of contemporary literary, philosophical, and ethical debates, Johnson shows how, through a close analysis of this figure's recurrence through time, we might understand something of the paradoxes, if not the impasses of contemporary multiculturalism.