Would some kind soul offer some recommendations on books or web sites re
modernism in literature?
Danke
Richard Harter, c...@tiac.net, The Concord Research Institute
URL = http://www.tiac.net/users/cri, phone = 1-978-369-3911
"Clarity is a vice; of course, there is much to be said
for vice." - Nathan Childers
> Would some kind soul offer some recommendations on books or web sites re
> modernism in literature?
Could you be any less specific? Here's a few, off the top of my
head. Hugh Kenner's _The Pound Era_ is wonderful -- definitely my
top recommendation. _The Modern Tradition_, ed. Ellman and Feidelson,
is a big, fat teaching anthology. Oxford Press has a smaller one,
edited by Kermode and Hollander, with a tighter focus; _Modern British
Literature_ is the title. There's a helpful collection of essays
called _Modernism_, ed. Bradbury and McFarlane. _Modern Poetics_ is a
nice anthology of statements by poets like Yeats, Pound, Frost, and
Eliot (ed. Scully). Lots of good stuff there.
-- Moggin
>Richard:
>nice anthology of statements by poets like Yeats, Pounds, Frost, and
>Eliot (ed. Scully). Lots of good stuff there.
Thank you kindly. I will pass this on to the confused soul who asked it
of me.
> Would some kind soul offer some recommendations on books or web sites re
> modernism in literature?
An old standby is "Modernism," edited by Malcolm Bradbury and James
McFarlane, in the Pelican Guides to European Literature series. It's a bit
dated (1976), and decidedly male-biased, but it's a good overview.
Another old standby, much more personal and eclectic, is Hugh Kenner's "The
Pound Era." For those who hold to the somewhat old-fashioned view that
modernism in English literature was defined by Ezra, this is still the
Bible.
Shari Benstock's "Women of the Left Bank: Paris 1900-1940" is a valuable
corrective to many accounts of modernism. As against the
Yeats/Pound/Eliot/Joyce hierarchy, it introduces the idea of another
modernist canon: Gertrude Stein, H.D., Djuna Barnes, Mina Loy.
Stephen