Modernism in Wonderland

Modernism in Wonderland
Title Modernism in Wonderland PDF eBook
Author John D. Morgenstern
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 453
Release 2024-01-11
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1350248738

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Retracing the steps of a surprising array of 20th-century writers who ventured into the fantastical, topsy-turvy world of Lewis Carroll's fictions, this book demonstrates the full extent of Carroll's legacy in literary modernism. Testing the authority of language and mediation through extensive word-play and genre-bending, the Alice books undoubtedly prefigure literary modernism at its upmost experimental. The collection's chapters look beyond literary style to show how Carroll's writings had a far-reaching impact on modern life, from commercial culture to politics and philosophy. This book shows us the Alice we recognize from Carroll's novels but also the Alice modernist writers encountered through the looking-glass of these extraliterary discourses. Recovering a common touchstone between the likes of T. S. Eliot, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, W. H. Auden, and writers conventionally regarded on the periphery of modernist studies, such as Dorothy L. Sayers, Sylvia Plath, Jorge Luis Borges, Flann O'Brien, and Vladimir Nabokov, this volume ultimately provides a new entry-point into a more broadly conceptualised global modernism.

Ruskin and Modernism

Ruskin and Modernism
Title Ruskin and Modernism PDF eBook
Author Giovanni Cianci
Publisher Springer
Pages 237
Release 2000-12-12
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1403913609

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The extent of John Ruskin's influence has long been acknowledged, though his impact on the development of Anglo-American modernism has received little systematic attention. In this volume, published to mark the centenary of Ruskin's death, a group of international scholars consider what is often an awkward and conflicted relation. Ruskin's voluminous writings are seen to shelter an incipient modernism whose antipathy to a degraded modernity, powerfully predicts a major current within the work of the new century.

Chicago and the Making of American Modernism

Chicago and the Making of American Modernism
Title Chicago and the Making of American Modernism PDF eBook
Author Michelle E. Moore
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 265
Release 2019
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1350018031

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Chicago and the Making of American Modernism is the first full-length study of the vexed relationship between America's great modernist writers and the nation's “second city.” Michelle E. Moore explores the ways in which the defining writers of the era-Willa Cather, Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner and F. Scott Fitzgerald-engaged with the city and reacted against the commercial styles of "Chicago realism" to pursue their own, European-influenced mode of modernist art. Drawing on local archives to illuminate the literary culture of early 20th-century Chicago, this book reveals an important new dimension to the rise of American modernism.

Modernism and Eugenics

Modernism and Eugenics
Title Modernism and Eugenics PDF eBook
Author Donald J. Childs
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 284
Release 2001-09-06
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780521806015

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In Modernism and Eugenics, first published in 2001, Donald Childs shows how Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot and W. B. Yeats believed in eugenics, the science of race improvement and adapted this scientific discourse to the language and purposes of the modern imagination. Childs traces the impact of the eugenics movement on such modernist works as Mrs Dalloway, A Room of One's Own, The Waste Land and Yeats's late poetry and early plays. The language of eugenics moves, he claims, between public discourse and personal perspectives. It informs Woolf's theorization of woman's imagination; in Eliot's poetry, it pictures as a nightmare the myriad contemporary eugenical threats to humankind's biological and cultural future. And for Yeats, it becomes integral to his engagement with the occult and his commitment to Irish Nationalism. This is an interesting study of a controversial theme which reveals the centrality of eugenics in the life and work of several major modernist writers.

Benton, Pollock, and the Politics of Modernism

Benton, Pollock, and the Politics of Modernism
Title Benton, Pollock, and the Politics of Modernism PDF eBook
Author Erika Doss
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Pages 465
Release 1995-06
Genre Art
ISBN 0226159434

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Henri Bergson and British Modernism

Henri Bergson and British Modernism
Title Henri Bergson and British Modernism PDF eBook
Author Mary Ann Gillies
Publisher McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Pages 225
Release 1996-09-18
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0773566139

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Focusing on the work of T.E. Hulme, the Men of 1914, the Bloomsbury Group, T.S. Eliot, and John Middleton Murry, Gillies convincingly demonstrates that Bergson's theories underlie the literary aesthetics of the period that forms the intellectual basis of modern literature. She then turns her critical eye to five major modernist writers - T.S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, Dorothy Richardson, and Joseph Conrad - and provides insightful and detailed Bergsonian readings of their major works. Drawing on material not previously available, Gillies persuasively argues that Bergson was a major intellectual force in British literature during the first thirty years of the twentieth century.

Katherine Mansfield and Literary Modernism

Katherine Mansfield and Literary Modernism
Title Katherine Mansfield and Literary Modernism PDF eBook
Author Janet Wilson
Publisher A&C Black
Pages 230
Release 2011-07-07
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1441111301

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A reinterpretation of Katharine Mansfield's work that expands our understanding of her place in Modernism.