The persistence of modernism : loss and mourning in the twentieth century
著者
書誌事項
The persistence of modernism : loss and mourning in the twentieth century
Cambridge University Press, 2009
- : hbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 177-209) and index
収録内容
- Woolf's resilience
- Stein's shame
- H.D.'s wars
- Pictures, arguments, and empathy
- The promise and peril of metic intimacy
- Orpheus, AIDS, and The hours
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Modernism is commonly perceived as a response to the cataclysmic events of the early twentieth century. To what extent then can we explain its continued persistence? Madelyn Detloff argues for modernism's relevance to our own age, a time of escalating loss, retribution and desire. Some of the social formations that inspired modernist cultural production - xenophobic nationalism and imperial hubris - are still with us. Writers such as Virginia Woolf and Gertrude Stein, who saw themselves as outsiders with a precarious sense of belonging to their dominant culture, are, Detloff claims, still able to give us insight into our contemporary narratives of loss, recovery, memory and nation. Detloff extends her conceptualisation to include current writers like Pat Barker and Hanif Kureshi, who have taken up the modernist thread in their own work; the result is an ambitious study that will appeal to all students and scholars of modernism.
目次
- Introduction: 'The captivating spell of the past'
- Part I. War, Time, Trauma: 1. Woolf's resilience
- 2. Stein's shame
- 3. H. D.'s wars
- Part II. The Modernist Patch: 4. Pictures, arguments, and empathy
- 5. The promise and peril of metic intimacy
- 6. Orpheus, AIDS, and The Hours
- Epilogue: towards a survivable public mourning.
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