Book Description
In Mourning Modernity, Seth Moglen offers a bold new map of American literary modernism as a psychologically and politically divided response to the injuries inflicted by modern capitalism.
Author : Seth Moglen
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 354 pages
File Size : 26,74 MB
Release : 2007
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780804754187
In Mourning Modernity, Seth Moglen offers a bold new map of American literary modernism as a psychologically and politically divided response to the injuries inflicted by modern capitalism.
Author : Seth Moglen
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 352 pages
File Size : 27,31 MB
Release : 2007-08-13
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1503626008
In Mourning Modernity, Seth Moglen argues that American literary modernism is, at its heart, an effort to mourn for the injuries inflicted by modern capitalism. He demonstrates that the most celebrated literary movement of the 20th century is structured by a deep conflict between political hope and despair—between the fear that alienation and exploitation were irresistible facts of life and the yearning for a more just and liberated society. He traces this conflict in the works of a dozen novelists and poets – ranging from Eliot, Hemingway, and Faulkner to Hurston, Hughes, and Tillie Olsen. Taking John Dos Passos' neglected U.S.A. trilogy as a central case study, he demonstrates how the struggle between reparative social mourning and melancholic despair shaped the literary strategies of a major modernist writer and the political fate of the American Left. Mourning Modernity offers a bold new map of the modernist tradition, as well as an important contribution to the cultural history of American radicalism and to contemporary theoretical debates about mourning and trauma.
Author : Vivasvan Soni
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Page : 560 pages
File Size : 36,77 MB
Release : 2010
Category : History
ISBN : 9780801448171
"A work of rare scope and power that grapples with the big questions: Is happiness the proper end of life, as the Greeks conceived it to be, or is life, as it appears since the early English novel, an endless trial?"--Adam Potkay
Author : T. Clewell
Publisher : Springer
Page : 189 pages
File Size : 48,82 MB
Release : 2009-10-22
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0230274250
Mourning, Modernism, Postmodernism traces the emergence of a fundamentally new way of writing about individual and collective mourning, demonstrating how a refusal of consolation and closure succeeds in promoting a progressive cultural politics crucial for reimaging gender, racial, and sexual subjects.
Author : Patricia Rae
Publisher : Bucknell University Press
Page : 324 pages
File Size : 22,44 MB
Release : 2007
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780838756171
The essays in Modernism and Mourning examine the work of mourning in modernist literature, or more precisely, its propensity for resisting this work. Drawing from recent developments in the theory and cultural history of mourning, its contributors explore the various ways in which modernist writers repudiate Freud's famous injunction to mourners to work through their grief, endorsing instead a resistant, or melancholic mourning that shapes both their themes and their radical experiments with form. The emerging picture of the pervasive influence of melancholic mourning in modernist literature casts new light on longstanding critical arguments, especially those about the politics of modernism. It also makes clear the pertinence of this literature to the present day, in which the catastrophic losses of 9/11, of retaliatory war, of racially motivated genocide, of the AIDS epidemic, have made the work of mourning a subject of widespread interest and debate. Patricia Rae is Head of the Department of English at Queen's University.
Author : Lecia Rosenthal
Publisher : Fordham Univ Press
Page : 172 pages
File Size : 21,18 MB
Release : 2011
Category : Literary Collections
ISBN : 0823233979
This book examines the writing of catastrophe, mass death, and collective loss in twentieth-century literature and criticism. With particular focus on texts by Woolf, Benjamin, and Sebald, it engages the century's preoccupation with world-ending, a mixed rhetoric of totality and rupture, finitude and survival, the end and its posthumous remainders. The spectacle of world-ending proliferates as a form of desire, an ambivalent compulsion to consume and outlive the end of all. In conversation with discussions of the century's passionfor the real, the author reads the century's obsession with negative forms of ending and outcome. Drawing connections between current interest in trauma and the sublime, she reframes the terms of the modernist experiment and its aesthetics from the lens of a late sublime
Author : Greg Forter
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 227 pages
File Size : 49,41 MB
Release : 2011-04-14
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1139501240
American modernist writers' engagement with changing ideas of gender and race often took the form of a struggle against increasingly inflexible categories. Greg Forter interprets modernism as an effort to mourn a form of white manhood that fused the 'masculine' with the 'feminine'. He argues that modernists were engaged in a poignant yet deeply conflicted effort to hold on to socially 'feminine' and racially marked aspects of identity, qualities that the new social order encouraged them to disparage. Examining works by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner and Willa Cather, Forter shows how these writers shared an ambivalence toward the feminine and an unease over existing racial categories that made it difficult for them to work through the loss of the masculinity they mourned. Gender, Race, and Mourning in American Modernism offers a bold reading of canonical modernism in the United States.
Author : Eva Åhrén
Publisher : University Rochester Press
Page : 234 pages
File Size : 27,89 MB
Release : 2009
Category : Science
ISBN : 1580463126
A provocative study that explores medical, social, cultural, and aesthetic customs and practices of treating the dead body in Sweden in an era of modernization.
Author : Laura Wittman
Publisher : University of Toronto Press
Page : 457 pages
File Size : 47,77 MB
Release : 2011-01-01
Category : History
ISBN : 1442643390
I slutningen af 1. Verdenskrig indførte flere krigsførende lande et nyt hidtil ukendt ritual. Kroppen af en anonym soldat, død på slagmarken, blev begravet i "den ukendte soldats grav" for at symbolisere den fælles sorg over slagmarkens voldsomme traumer. Ved at undersøge hvordan forskellige lande ofte med vidt forskellig politisk og kulturel baggrund har anvendt "Den ukendte Soldat" symbolsk, hævder forfatteren, at der er skabt en ny måde at udtrykke fælles national sorg på.
Author : Thomas C. Oden
Publisher :
Page : 188 pages
File Size : 13,25 MB
Release : 1992
Category : Philosophy
ISBN :
Thomas C. Oden describes the cultural shifts occurring in both Russia and America, focusing on the two worlds of perishing modernity and emerging postmodernity, and discussing what these monumental changes mean for Christianity and American Christians. 168 pages, paper