Hope and Aesthetic Utility in Modernist Literature Hope and Aesthetic Utility in Modernist Literature
Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature

Hope and Aesthetic Utility in Modernist Literature

    • $74.99
    • $74.99

Publisher Description

"Hope" and "modernism" are two words that are not commonly linked. Moving from much-discussed negative affects to positive forms of feeling, Hope and Aesthetic Utility in Modernist Literature argues that they should be. This book contends that much of modernist writing and thought reveals a deeply held confidence about the future, one premised on the social power of art itself. In chapters ranging across a diverse array of canonical writers – Henry James, D.W. Griffith, H.D., Melvin Tolson, and Samuel Beckett – this text locates in their works an optimism linked by a common faith in the necessity of artistic practice for cultural survival. In this way, the famously self-attentive nature of modernism becomes a means, for its central thinkers and artists, of reflecting on what DeJong calls aesthetic utility: the unpredictable, ungovernable capacity of the work of art to shape the future even while envisioning it.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2020
13 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
206
Pages
PUBLISHER
Taylor & Francis
SELLER
Taylor & Francis Group
SIZE
3.8
MB

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