Modernism and Affect

Modernism and Affect
Author: Julie Taylor
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2015-05-17
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0748693270

This book addresses an under-researched area of modernist studies, reconsidering modernist attitudes towards feeling in the light of the humanities' turn to affect.

Modernism and Affect

Modernism and Affect
Author: Julie Taylor
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2015-05-17
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0748693262

This book addresses an under-researched area of modernist studies, reconsidering modernist attitudes towards feeling in the light of the humanities' turn to affect.

Affective Materialities

Affective Materialities
Author: Kara Watts
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Total Pages: 275
Release: 2019-03-04
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0813057078

Affective Materialities reexamines modernist theorizations of the body and opens up the artistic, political, and ethical possibilities at the intersection of affect theory and ecocriticism, two recent directions in literary studies not typically brought into conversation. Modernist creativity, the volume proposes, may return to us notions of the feeling, material body that contemporary scholarship has lost touch with, bodies that suggest alternative relations to others and to the world. Contributors argue that modernist writers frequently bridge the dichotomy between body and world by portraying bodies that merge with or are re-created by their surroundings into an amalgam of self and place. Chapters focus on this treatment of the body through works by canonical modernists including William Carlos Williams, Virginia Woolf, and E. M. Forster alongside lesser-studied writers Janet Frame, Herbert Read, and Nella Larsen. Showing the ways the body in literature can be a lens for understanding the fluidities of race, gender, and sexuality, as well as species and subjectivity, this volume maps the connections among modernist aesthetics, histories of the twentieth-century body, and the concerns of modernism that can also speak to urgent concerns of today.

Spaces of Feeling

Spaces of Feeling
Author: Marta Figlerowicz
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2017-12-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1501714236

Can other people notice our affects more easily than we do? In Spaces of Feeling, Marta Figlerowicz examines modernist novels and poems that treat this possibility as electrifying, but also deeply disturbing. Their characters and lyric speakers are undone, Figlerowicz posits, by the realization that they depend on others to solve their inward affective conundrums—and that, to these other people, their feelings often do not seem mysterious at all. Spaces of Feeling features close readings of works by Virginia Woolf, James Baldwin, John Ashbery, Ralph Ellison, Marcel Proust, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sylvia Plath, and Wallace Stevens. Figlerowicz points out that these poets and novelists often place their protagonists in domestic spaces—such as bedrooms, living rooms, and basements—in which their cognitive dependence on other characters inhabiting these spaces becomes clear. Figlerowicz highlights the diversity of aesthetic and sociopolitical contexts in which these affective dependencies become central to these authors' representations of selfhood. By setting these novels and poems in conversation with the work of contemporary theorists, she illuminates pressing and unanswered questions about subjectivity.

Djuna Barnes and Affective Modernism

Djuna Barnes and Affective Modernism
Author: Julie Taylor
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2012-02-29
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0748664378

Explores the dynamic connections between the affective body and Djuna Barnes's textual corpus. The five chapters of this book reconsider modernist intertextuality, affect, and subjectivity to produce a series of lively and compelling readings of the major

Modernism à la Mode

Modernism à la Mode
Author: Elizabeth M. Sheehan
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2018-10-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1501728156

Modernism à la Mode argues that fashion describes why and how literary modernism matters in its own historical moment and ours. Bringing together texts, textiles, and theories of dress, Elizabeth Sheehan shows that writers, including Virginia Woolf, D.H. Lawrence, W.E.B. Du Bois, Nella Larsen, and F. Scott Fitzgerald, turned to fashion to understand what their own stylized works could do in the context of global capital, systemic violence, and social transformation. Modernists engage with fashion as a mood, a set of material objects, and a target of critique, and, in doing so, anticipate and address contemporary debates centered on the uses of literature and literary criticism amidst the supposed crisis in the humanities. A modernist affect with a purpose, no less. By engaging modernism à la mode—that is, contingently, contextually, and in light of contemporary concerns—this book offers an alternative to the often-untenable distinctions between strong or weak, suspicious or reparative, and politically activist or quietist approaches to literature, which frame current debates about literary methodology. As fashion helps us to describe what modernist texts do, it enables us to do more with modernism as a form of inquiry, perception, and critique. Fashion and modernism are interwoven forms of inquiry, perception, and critique, writes Sheehan. It is fashion that puts the work of early twentieth-century writers in conversation with twenty-first century theories of emotion, materiality, animality, beauty, and history.

Feeling Modern

Feeling Modern
Author: Justus Nieland
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2008
Genre: Eccentrics and eccentricities
ISBN: 0252075463

A new look at modernism's relationship to human feeling and the public sphere

Affective Mapping

Affective Mapping
Author: Jonathan FLATLEY
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2009-06-30
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0674036964

The surprising claim of this book is that dwelling on loss is not necessarily depressing. Instead, embracing melancholy can be a road back to contact with others and can lead people to productively remap their relationship to the world around them. Flatley demonstrates that a seemingly disparate set of modernist writers and thinkers showed how aesthetic activity can give us the means to comprehend and change our relation to loss.

The Routledge Research Companion to Modernism in Music

The Routledge Research Companion to Modernism in Music
Author: Björn Heile
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 518
Release: 2018-10-29
Genre: Music
ISBN: 131704245X

Modernism in music still arouses passions and is riven by controversies. Taking root in the early decades of the twentieth century, it achieved ideological dominance for almost three decades following the Second World War, before becoming the object of widespread critique in the last two decades of the century, both from critics and composers of a postmodern persuasion and from prominent scholars associated with the ‘new musicology’. Yet these critiques have failed to dampen its ongoing resilience. The picture of modernism has considerably broadened and diversified, and has remained a pivotal focus of debate well into the twenty-first century. This Research Companion does not seek to limit what musical modernism might be. At the same time, it resists any dilution of the term that would see its indiscriminate application to practically any and all music of a certain period. In addition to addressing issues already well established in modernist studies such as aesthetics, history, institutions, place, diaspora, cosmopolitanism, production and performance, communication technologies and the interface with postmodernism, this volume also explores topics that are less established; among them: modernism and affect, modernism and comedy, modernism versus the ‘contemporary’, and the crucial distinction between modernism in popular culture and a ‘popular modernism’, a modernism of the people. In doing so, this text seeks to define modernism in music by probing its margins as much as by restating its supposed essence.

The New Modernist Studies

The New Modernist Studies
Author: Douglas Mao
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 367
Release: 2021-02-04
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1108487068

The first book specifically devoted to the history and prospects of the new modernist studies.