A Companion to Modernist Literature and CultureDavid Bradshaw, Kevin J. H. Dettmar John Wiley & Sons, 15 de abr. de 2008 - 624 páginas The Companion combines a broad grounding in the essential texts and contexts of the modernist movement with the unique insights of scholars whose careers have been devoted to the study of modernism.
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Página xiv
... Nietzsche, Foucault, Heidegger, the End of Art, and Miles Davis. He is the author of Technology and the Human Condition (1976) and Between Montmartre and the Mudd Club: Popular Music and the Avant-Garde (2002). Presently he is working ...
... Nietzsche, Foucault, Heidegger, the End of Art, and Miles Davis. He is the author of Technology and the Human Condition (1976) and Between Montmartre and the Mudd Club: Popular Music and the Avant-Garde (2002). Presently he is working ...
Página 10
... Nietzsche and beyond, blend the measured heritage of the Enlightenment with the lessons in excess drawn from Romanticism. “Modernity's great problem. . . was that it had not been modern enough, that the restless, perpetually self ...
... Nietzsche and beyond, blend the measured heritage of the Enlightenment with the lessons in excess drawn from Romanticism. “Modernity's great problem. . . was that it had not been modern enough, that the restless, perpetually self ...
Página 11
... Nietzsche and Joyce; consequently, no modernist could be dispensed from “thinking” through a personal “philosophy” that would be both critical and clinical, reflexive and creative. Like Flaubert, Nietzsche (one of the three “masters of ...
... Nietzsche and Joyce; consequently, no modernist could be dispensed from “thinking” through a personal “philosophy” that would be both critical and clinical, reflexive and creative. Like Flaubert, Nietzsche (one of the three “masters of ...
Página 12
... Nietzsche, who is selected for a systematic denunciation. If Nordau grants a measure of talent to Nietzsche, he is “obviously insane from birth, and his books bear on every page the imprint ofinsanity” (Nordau 1895: 453). Curiously, the ...
... Nietzsche, who is selected for a systematic denunciation. If Nordau grants a measure of talent to Nietzsche, he is “obviously insane from birth, and his books bear on every page the imprint ofinsanity” (Nordau 1895: 453). Curiously, the ...
Página 13
... Nietzsche asserts as the ultimate value, namely, life, has an ontological as well as a biological foundation. Nietzsche paves the way to Bergson's vitalist monism and the Lebensphilosophie that marked the turn of the century. Any ...
... Nietzsche asserts as the ultimate value, namely, life, has an ontological as well as a biological foundation. Nietzsche paves the way to Bergson's vitalist monism and the Lebensphilosophie that marked the turn of the century. Any ...
Conteúdo
1 | |
7 | |
PART II Movements | 153 |
PART III Modernist Genres and Modern Media | 213 |
PART IV Readings | 285 |
Part V Other Modernisms | 525 |
Epilogue Modernism Now | 571 |
Index | 579 |
Outras edições - Ver todos
A Companion to Modernist Literature and Culture David Bradshaw,Kevin J. H. Dettmar Visualização parcial - 2008 |
A Companion to Modernist Literature and Culture David Bradshaw,Kevin J. H. Dettmar Visualização parcial - 2006 |
A Companion to Modernist Literature and Culture David Bradshaw,Kevin J. H. Dettmar Prévia não disponível - 2006 |
Termos e frases comuns
aesthetic African-American American architecture argued artists Auden avant-garde Beckett Breton Cambridge University Press character cinema Conrad consciousness critics culture D. H. Lawrence Dada early edition English essay European example experience expression Ezra Pound fiction film Ford Freud further reading Gatsby gender global Harlem Renaissance Hughes human Hurston idea images Imagist Impressionism James Joyce Joyce’s language Lawrence lesbian Lewis literary London Mauberley meaning Melanctha mind Miss Lonelyhearts modernism modernism’s modernist literature Moore’s movement narrative narrator Nietzsche Nightwood novel Oxford philosophical photography poem poem’s poet poetic poetry political postmodern prose psychology published readers reality References and further Review Richardson sense sexual social Stein Stevens story style suggests Surrealism symbolic T. S. Eliot Tarr theory things tradition twentieth century Ulysses unconscious Virginia Woolf vision visual Vorticist W. B. Yeats Waste Land William women Woolf words Wright’s writing Wyndham Lewis Yeats Yeats’s York