Modernist Objects
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Modernist Objects
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- 9781949979503 (Hardback)
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Modernist
Objects: Literature, Art, Culture is a unique mix of cultural studies, literature, and
visual arts applied to the discrete materiality of modernist objects. The simultaneously
physical and ideological nature of objects has made them remarkably transparent
to critical inquiries into their aesthetic, political, social, historical or
philosophical uses and meanings. This book identifies three processes at work in the apprehension
of objects in poetry, prose, visual arts, culture and crafts. If the first
instinct of the modernist novelists and playwrights was to object to the
realist tradition of objects as more or less stable inherited signifiers, they
felt themselves equally free, we find, to take up humanity as their object. The
human body, emotions and mind were endowed with newfound plasticity, and it was
now the artist’s and the writer’s task to fashion them after their own image,
mobilizing and expanding them through objects seen as relational and connective
catalysts for the modernist subject. Finally, the futile and decorative object
is explored. From Baroness Elsa performing the commodity fetish to Jean
Rhys performing the dissolution of the self in a frenzy of sartorial ornament,
the agency of surface detail (misplaced, proliferating, or repurposed) is made
manifest and given free play.
'The coalescent structure that comes out of Cuny and Kalck’s co-editorship maintains busy traffic across the porous disciplinary boundaries of modernist and object studies which fulfils the requisite for the integration of a conceptual compound. [...] The widening scope of objecthood that Douglas Mao [in his chapter on ‘objectionable objects’] continues to define is more than a reiteration of the modernist agenda of destabilising the given sense of the real. It is the explicit, and needed, statement of a distinct trend in the scholarship: the loosening of the human subject from its subjectivity.'Dazheng Gao, The Modernist Review
Author Information
Noëlle Cuny teaches translation and Anglo-American literature and culture, currently supervising student research on Woolf, Joyce, and on objects in modernism. After extensive work on the body in the novels D. H. Lawrence and on disciplinary hybridity in modernist writing, she became interested in the material conditions of the literary canonization process, namely, the magazines—first Lawrence’s own (very) little magazine, then the later and more ambitious J.M. Murry ventures: the Athenaeum 1919-1921 and the early years of The Adelphi. Xavier Kalck teaches American literature and translation at Sorbonne University in Paris. He specializes in twentieth-century poetry and modernism’s unacknowledged trajectories – second-generation modernists and the post-WWII efforts to revive and rewrite the modernist tradition. His current research projects revolve around the experience of reading as an all-inclusive material practice.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Price |
---|---|---|
Cover | 1 | |
Contents | 5 | |
Illustrations | 7 | |
Introduction | 11 | |
I OBJECTING TO REALISM | 29 | |
1 Objectionable Objects | 31 | |
2 “Such density of furniture defeats imagination” | 55 | |
3 From Eggbeaters and Alcohol to Gryphons, Dolls, and Puppets | 73 | |
4 Tradition and the Test-Tube Baby | 89 | |
II FASHIONING THE HUMAN | 105 | |
5 The Fabric of Home | 107 | |
6 Computer Science for (Live) Modernism(s)? Magazines as Metaobjects | 123 | |
7 “Twang the lyre and rattle the lexicon”: Harps and Lyres in Modernist Poetry | 141 | |
8 Louise Bourgeois’s Melancholy Objects to be Used | 165 | |
III PERFORMING THE ORNAMENTAL | 183 | |
9 Limbswish: Baroness Elsa’s “Ready-to-Wear” Poem-Objects | 185 | |
10 The Furniture of Alter-Modernism:Eileen Gray’s and Le Corbusier’s Two Orientalisms | 207 | |
11 “LOST! HANSOME GOLE BROOCH”: Broken, Lost, and Forgotten Objects in Woolf, Mansfield, and Stein | 227 | |
12 Diasporic Modernism: Memory, the Object, and Jean Rhys’s Good Morning, Midnight (1939) | 243 | |
Notes | 259 | |
Index | 297 |