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Genre | : |
Author | : Michael Gluzman |
Publisher | : |
Release | : 1993 |
File | : 450 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : UCAL:C2695555 |
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Genre | : |
Author | : Michael Gluzman |
Publisher | : |
Release | : 1993 |
File | : 450 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : UCAL:C2695555 |
"A remarkable study. . . . The first book of its kind and essential for any future discussion of modernism and its embattled boundaries."—Françoise Meltzer, author of Hot Property "One of the very best books of literary criticism, literary scholarship, or literary theory I have ever read. . . . It illuminates interrelationships between historical studies and theory in any humanist discipline."—Menachim Brinker, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem "A milestone in the study of modern Jewish literature. It seriously engages and recontextualizes all the scholarship that came before, and by so doing sets it on a new course: applying a rigorous definition of modernism yet insistent upon methodological diversity; deeply grounded in Hebrew culture yet unabashedly diaspora-centered. This is not a book that readers will take lightly."—David G. Roskies, author of Against the Apocalypse
Genre | : Education |
Author | : Chana Kronfeld |
Publisher | : Univ of California Press |
Release | : 1996-11-22 |
File | : 311 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 9780520083479 |
Presenting a multifaceted portrait of modernist culture in Russia, an array of distinguished scholars shows how artists and writers in the early twentieth century engaged with politics, science, and religion. At a time when many Russian social institutions looked to the past, modernist arts powerfully amplified a gamut of new ideas about individual and collective transformation. Expanding upon prior studies that focus more specifically on literary manifestations of the movement, Reframing Russian Modernism features original research that ranges broadly, from political aesthetics to Darwinism to yoga. These unique complementary perspectives counter reductionism of any kind, integrating the study of Russian modernism into the larger body of humanistic scholarship devoted to modernity.
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
Author | : Irina Shevelenko |
Publisher | : University of Wisconsin Press |
Release | : 2018-12-11 |
File | : 272 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 9780299320409 |
In this volume Robert Pippin disputes many traditional characterisations of the distinctiveness of modern philosophy.
Genre | : Philosophy |
Author | : Robert B. Pippin |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Release | : 1997-01-28 |
File | : 486 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 0521568730 |
Adam Parkes investigates the literary and cultural implications of the censorship encountered by several modern novelists in the early twentieth century. He situates modernism in the context of this censorship, examining the relations between such authors as D.H. Lawrence, James Joyce, Radclyffe Hall, and Virginia Woolf and the public controversies generated by their fictional explorations of modern sexual themes. These authors located "obscenity" at the level of stylistic and formal experiment. The Rainbow, Lady Chatterley's Lover, Ulysses, and Orlando dramatized problems of sexuality and expression in ways that subverted the moral, political, and aesthetic premises on which their censors operated. In showing how modernism evolved within a culture of censorship, Modernism and the Theater of Censorship suggests that modern novelists, while shaped by their culture, attempted to reshape it.
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
Author | : Adam Parkes |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press |
Release | : 1996-02-22 |
File | : 257 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 9780195357103 |
This significant historical study recasts modern art in Japan as a “parallel modernism” that was visually similar to Euroamerican modernism, but developed according to its own internal logic. Using the art and thought of prominent Japanese modern artist Koga Harue (1895–1933) as a lens to understand this process, Chinghsin Wu explores how watercolor, cubism, expressionism, and surrealism emerged and developed in Japan in ways that paralleled similar trends in the west, but also rejected and diverged from them. In this first English-language book on Koga Harue, Wu provides close readings of virtually all of the artist’s major works and provides unprecedented access to the critical writing about modernism in Japan during the 1920s and 1930s through primary source documentation, including translations of period art criticism, artist statements, letters, and journals.
Genre | : Art |
Author | : Chinghsin Wu |
Publisher | : University of California Press |
Release | : 2019-11-12 |
File | : 247 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 9780520299825 |
As garment workers, longshoremen, autoworkers, sharecroppers and clerks took to the streets, striking and organizing unions in the midst of the Depression, artists, writers and filmmakers joined the insurgent social movement by creating a cultural front. Disney cartoonists walked picket lines, and Billie Holiday sand 'Strange Fruit' at the left-wing cabaret, Café Society. Duke Ellington produced a radical musical, Jump for Joy, New York garment workers staged the legendary Broadway revue Pins and Needles, and Orson Welles and his Mercury players took their labor operas and anti-fascist Shakespeare to Hollywood and made Citizen Kane. A major reassessment of US cultural history, The Cultural Front is a vivid mural of this extraordinary upheaval which reshaped American culture in the twentieth century.
Genre | : Art |
Author | : Michael Denning |
Publisher | : Verso |
Release | : 1998 |
File | : 596 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 1859841708 |
Bornstein looks at modernism in its original sites of production.
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
Author | : George Bornstein |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Release | : 2001-02-05 |
File | : 206 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 0521661544 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
Author | : Robert Kiely |
Publisher | : Harvard University Press |
Release | : 1983 |
File | : 278 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 0674580656 |
Reconstructing Modernism establishes for the first time the centrality of modernist buildings and architectural periodicals to British mid-century literature. Drawing upon a wealth of previously unexplored architectural criticism by British authors, this book reveals how arguments about architecture led to innovations in literature, as well as to redesigns in the concept of modernism itself. While the city has long been a focus of literary modernist studies, architectural modernism has never had its due. Scholars usually characterize architectural modernism as a parallel modernism or even an incompatible modernism to literature. Giving special attention to dystopian classics Brave New World and Nineteen Eighty-Four, this study argues that sustained attention to modern architecture shaped mid-century authors' political and aesthetic commitments. After many writers deemed modernist architects to be agents for communism and other collectivist movements, they squared themselves—and literary modernist detachment and aesthetic autonomy—against the seemingly tyrannical utopianism of modern architecture; literary aesthetic qualities were reclaimed as political qualities. In this way, Reconstructing Modernism redraws the boundaries of literary modernist studies: rather than simply adding to its canon, it argues that the responsibility for defining literary modernism for the mid-century public was shared by an incredible variety of authors—Edwardians, modernists, satirists, and even anti-modernists.
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
Author | : Ashley Maher |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press |
Release | : 2020-03-12 |
File | : 288 Pages |
ISBN-13 | : 9780192548429 |