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Modernist Authenticities : the Material Body and the Poetics of Amy Lowell and William Carlos Williams.

'Modernist Authenticities' challenges current understandings of modernism by investigating modernist poetry's affinities with surfaces, performances, and materiality. Arguing that modernist writers reference the material body as a source of authenticity and anxiety, this study explore...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Knewitz, Simone
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Heidelberg : Universitätsverlag Winter, 2014.
Colección:American Studies - A Monograph Series.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction; Modernism and the Quest for Authenticity; Understanding Poems as Social Acts; The Body as a Source of Authenticity and Anxiety; Amy Lowell, William Carlos Williams, and the Canons of Modernism; 1 Poetry and Materiality: The Flower as Modernist Trope; "nature is not all red in tooth and claw": The Victorian Culture of Flowers; The Language and Eroticism of Flowers in the Poetry of Lowell, T.S. Eliot, and H.D.; "Steel Roses": Flowers in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction; Modern(ist) Flower Discourses and the Power of the Performative.
  • 2 Authenticity, Presence, Voice: Modernist Formal Innovation and Early Twentieth-Century Expressive CultureFrom the Expressive Culture Movement to Physical Culture; Spoken Art: Amy Lowell and S.S. Curry's Theory of Expression; Poetry as Self-Expression? Authenticity, Presence, and Voice in Williams's Al Que Quiere!; Authentic Expression and Natural Form; 3 Borderline Modernism: Sensation, Expression, and the Unconscious; Expression as Improvisation: The Performance of Immediacy in Kora in Hell; Black Bodies, White Subjects: Sensation and Expression in Borderline.
  • Amy Lowell and the Senses of Modernism4 Techniques of the Observer: Formal Experimentation in Williams's Voyeuristic Poetry; Spectacles of Deviance: "To Elsie" and Turn-of-the-Century Visual Representations; Observing the Observer: Williams's Self-Reflective Voyeurism; "The supreme importance / of this nameless spectacle": The Poet's Gaze and the Bodies of Others in Spring and All; "Secret gardens of the self": Diagnostic Encounters in the "Doctor Stories"; 5 Pictures of the FloatingWorld: Racial and Sexual Otherness in Lowell's Enclosed Garden.
  • The "Lacquer Prints": Sex and the Floating World"When we have shut and barred the door": The Poetics of the Enclosed Garden; Lowell, Williams, and the Spectacle of the Other; Coda, Rethinking Modernism(s), Revisiting the Harlem Renaissance; Performing Authenticity: Modernism and the Material Body; Rereading the Harlem Renaissance; (Re)Turn to Presence: Modernist Poetry and Contemporary Theory; Works Cited.