Orpheus, a World in Chorus
Author : Barzun
Publisher :
Page : 244 pages
File Size : 25,63 MB
Release : 1962
Category : Literature, Modern
ISBN :
Author : Barzun
Publisher :
Page : 244 pages
File Size : 25,63 MB
Release : 1962
Category : Literature, Modern
ISBN :
Author : Milton A. Cohen
Publisher : Lexington Books
Page : 385 pages
File Size : 42,98 MB
Release : 2004-09-14
Category : Art
ISBN : 0739157922
The years before World War I were a fertile period for artists in Europe and the United States who were challenging aesthetic convention in music, writing, and the visual arts. These early pioneers of modernism sometimes preferred to work alone, but just as often they were associated with groups whose boundaries were permeable and freely changing. While these individual groups_including the Futurists, Imagists, Blue Rider, and the Second Vienna School_have been thoroughly studied, scholars of the period have often neglected the formative and pervasive interactions of these groups across geographic and artistic boundaries. Providing a historical taxonomy of this influential milieu, Milton Cohen demonstrates how these groups were largely responsible for the artistic innovation and nearly all the avant-garde agitation and major events of these years. With concluding appendices intended for scholars and specialists, this engagingly written book will be useful not only for classroom use and scholarly research, but will appeal to anyone interested in reading a fresh approach to the history of early modernism.
Author : Jed Rasula
Publisher : University of Alabama Press
Page : 382 pages
File Size : 33,62 MB
Release : 2022-03-29
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0817360301
"Jed Rasula is a preeminent scholar of avant-garde poetics, noted for his erudition, intellectual range, and critical independence. He's also a gifted writer-his recent books have won praise for their entertaining, clear prose in addition to their scholarship. He is also an alumnus of UAP's distinguished Modern and Contemporary Poetics series, which published his Syncopations fifteen years ago. Rasula returns to the MCP series with Wreading, A collection of essays, interviews and occasional writings that reflects the breadth and diversity of his curiosity. One of the referees likened Wreading to a "victory lap, but one that sets its own further record in the taking." This is a collection of highlights from Rasula's shorter critical pieces, but also a carefully assembled and revised intellectual autobiography. Wreading consists of two parts: an assortment of Rasula's solo criticism, and selected interviews and conversations with other critics and scholars (Evelyn Reilly, Leonard Schwartz, Tony Tost, Mike Chasar, Joel Bettridge, and Ming-Qian Ma). The collection opens with a trio of essays that complicate the idea of a "poet." By interrogating the selection of poets for anthologies in the 20th century, Rasula identifies a host of "forgotten" poets, once prominent but now forgotten. Another essay on the state of the poetry anthology reveals how much influence literary gatekeepers have, and what a reimagination of the anthology form could make possible. In subsequent chapters, Rasula finds surprising overlap between Dada and Ralph Waldo Emerson, charts the deep links between image and poetic inspiration, and reckons with Ron Silliman's The Alphabet, a UAP classic. In the book's second half, Rasula engages in detailed conversations with a roster of fellow critics. Their exchanges confront ecopoetics, the corporate university, the sheer volume of contemporary poetry, and more. This substantial set of dialogues gives readers a glimpse inside a master critic's deeply informed critical practice, and lists his intellectual touchstones. The balance between essay and interview achieves a distillation of Rasula's long-established idea of "wreading." In his original use, the term denotes how any act of criticism inherently adds to the body of writing that it purports to read- how Rasula "couldn't help but participate" in his favorite poems. In this latest form, Wreading captures a critical perception that sparks insight and imagination, no matter what it sees"--
Author : Fabio A. Durão
Publisher : Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Page : 275 pages
File Size : 34,37 MB
Release : 2009-03-26
Category : Psychology
ISBN : 1443808326
For decades, the study of literary and philosophical modernism concerned solitary figures like the flâneur, the exile, and the lonely genius, but recently the group formations that fostered modernist movements have emerged into view. The essays in Modernist Group Dynamics: The Poetics and Politics of Friendship pursue this new direction in modernist scholarship, exploring the ways artists and intellectuals worked in concert and in conflict. Placing group formations, with all their promises and problems, at the centre of our study allows the contributors—scholars from around the world—to reconsider some of the best-known figures of European modernism, to analyze collaborations across national boundaries, and to recover modernist groups in unexpected contexts like the so-called Third World.
Author : Joseph Masheck
Publisher : Penn State University Press
Page : 328 pages
File Size : 50,72 MB
Release : 1993
Category : Architecture
ISBN :
Joseph Masheck wants to take art, historical and modern, as a field of lively interrelations (as if in "random-access memory" retrieval), rather than just second the motion that art history should be nonlinear; and he takes the task of art criticism to be theory in practice. Thus significant new art is represented in the thirty essays in Modernities, besides already "classic" modern architecture, sculpture, and photography, and contemporary painting by artists. Alternating between a comprehensive sense of art history and engagement with the new and unplumbed contemporary arts, he considers himself a kind of aesthetic double agent. Because Masheck is concerned with the concrete standing of artworks, he speculates on how works of art, including Marcel Duchamp's "ready-mades," relate to other things. More general themes range from the origin of the modern sense of form in prehistoric art to the historical underpinnings of expressionism and on to latter-day "graffiti" culture.
Author : Robert Crunden
Publisher :
Page : 526 pages
File Size : 17,79 MB
Release : 2000
Category : Art
ISBN :
A sweeping cultural history of American Modernism in the 1920s, viewed through the prismatic lens of jazz.
Author : Virginia Spate
Publisher : Oxford : Clarendon Press : New York : Oxford University Press
Page : 456 pages
File Size : 43,82 MB
Release : 1979
Category : Art
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 676 pages
File Size : 18,6 MB
Release : 1958
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
Publisher :
Page : 142 pages
File Size : 36,59 MB
Release : 1964
Category : Exhibitions
ISBN :
Author : Roland N. Stromberg
Publisher : Prentice Hall
Page : 396 pages
File Size : 39,94 MB
Release : 1975
Category : History
ISBN :