Historicizing Modernism
While having much to say to literary criticism more broadly, this volume is closely focused upon key modernist figures and emergent themes in light of the discipline''s ''archival turn'' – termed in a unifying introduction ''achivalism''.
An essential ingredient separating the above, recent tendency from a much older and better-established new historicism, in modernist studies at least, is that ''the literary canon'' remains an important starting point. Whereas new historicism ''is interested in history as represented and recorded in written documents'' and tends toward a ''parallel study of literature and non-literary texts'', archival criticism tends toward recognised, oftentimes canonical or critically-lauded, writers, presented in Part 1. Sidestepping the vicissitudes of canon formation, manuscript scholars tend to gravitate toward leading modernist authors: James Joyce, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, Gertrude Stein, T.S. Eliot and Samuel Beckett. Part of the reason is obvious: known authors frequently leave behind sizeable literary estates, which are then acquired by research centres. A second section then applies the same empirical methodology to key or emergent themes in the study of modernism, including queer modernism; spatial modernism; little magazines (and online finding aids structuring them); and the role of faith and/or emotions in the construction of ''modernism'' as we know it.
- Redaktör
- Matthew Feldman, Anna Svendsen, Erik Tonning
- ISBN
- 9781350215054
- Språk
- engelska
- Utgivningsdatum
- 2021-06-17
- Förlag
- Bloomsbury Publishing
- Sidor
- 264

