Modernist Invention
Media Technology and American Poetry
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:23rd Jul '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Modernist Invention attends to the parallel histories of media technology and modernist American poetry.
This book will be of use primarily to academics and students of twentieth-century literature, and particularly to those who are interested in the relationship between literature and technology. It will provide them with a series of contexts and methods with which to read modernist poetry from the point of view of media history.The media ecology of North America has long fascinated historians and literary scholars, but what does verse have to tell us about the way sound has evolved? What did it mean for modernist poets to make the mechanics of sound their business? And in what sense did their contriving ways to intervene in the culture of recording and transmission enable the articulation of a more or less 'authentic' voice than the kind earlier generations of poets had cultivated? For the writers considered in this study – Robert Frost, Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore, and Langston Hughes – such questions were not always easy to resolve, but rather called for a kind of creative troubleshooting, a will to think laterally about the ways a lyric poem might accommodate or become entangled in the most ordinary of technological effects and processes, from telephony to radio waves, phonography to movie-going.
ISBN: 9781108496322
Dimensions: 233mm x 158mm x 23mm
Weight: 580g
290 pages