1913: The Cradle of Modernism 1st Edition by Jean-Michael Rabate, ISBN-13: 978-1405161923
[PDF eBook eTextbook]
- Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell; 1st edition (November 19, 2007)
- Language: English
- 256 pages
- ISBN-10: 1405161922
- ISBN-13: 978-1405161923
This innovative volume puts modernist literature in its cultural, intellectual, and global context, within the framework of the year 1913. This significant year was marked by many critical events and happenings, such as the first international recognition of non-Western writers when the Nobel Prize in literature was awarded to Rabindranath Tagore; it was also the last year of peace before the eruption of the First World War.
1913 examines the wide range of diverse artistic, literary, and political endeavours undertaken in this one year. For example, while Yeats and Pound were collaborating at Stone Cottage and discovering Japanese culture, Joyce was completing his autobiographical novel in Trieste, Du Bois was creating his Ethiopian pageant in New York, and Paris was resounding with the scandal caused by Stravinsky’s contested Rite of Spring. The book also explores and compares Apollinaire’s Alcools and Rilke’s Spanish Trilogy with Pound’s Personae, and Edith Wharton’s The Custom of the Country with Proust’s Swann’s Way. Engaging and insightful, this volume will encourage the reader to appreciate the breadth of activity that took place in this pivotal year, and its lasting influence.
Table of Contents:
List of Illustrations vi
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Modernism, Crisis, and Early Globalization 1
1 The New in the Arts 18
2 Collective Agencies 46
3 Everyday Life and the New Episteme 72
4 Learning to be Modern in 1913 96
5 Global Culture and the Invention of the Other 118
6 The Splintered Subject of Modernism 141
7 At War with Oneself: The Last Cosmopolitan Travels of German and Austrian Modernism 164
8 Modernism and the End of Nostalgia 185
Conclusion: Antagonisms 208
Notes 217
Index 235
Jean-Michel Rabaté is Vartan Gregorian Professor in the Humanities at the University of Pennsylvania. He is a leading figure among the generation of French theorists taught by Derrida and by Lacan. His books include the Blackwell Manifesto volume The Future of Theory (2002), The Ghosts of Modernity (1996), Joyce and the Politics of Egoism (2001), Jacques Lacan and Literature (2001), and Given: 1) Art, 2) Crime (2006). He has edited The Cambridge Companion to Jacques Lacan (2002), Writing the Image after Roland Barthes (1997), and the Palgrave Advances in James Joyce Studies (2004).
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