Modernism Beyond the Avant-Garde Modernism Beyond the Avant-Garde

Modernism Beyond the Avant-Garde

Embodying Experience

    • £62.99
    • £62.99

Publisher Description

Critics have traditionally maintained that capitalism's resurgence after the Second World War precipitated the transition from modernism to postmodernism. This revisionist account shows that modernism does not simply decline. By foregrounding phenomenological conceptions of bodily experience, Jason M. Baskin reveals modernism's ongoing vitality. Key postwar writers, critics and philosophers, including Elizabeth Bishop, Ezra Pound, Ralph Ellison and Raymond Williams, as well as Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Theodor Adorno, developed an aesthetics of embodiment that adapted modernism to a new postwar landscape. Working across differences of race, gender, national and intellectual tradition, genre and form, Baskin contends that these authors used ordinary bodily experiences, such as perception, memory and laughter, to imagine modes of common being and purpose that were otherwise unavailable in a postwar society dominated by liberal capitalism.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2018
12 November
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
421
Pages
PUBLISHER
Cambridge University Press
SIZE
6.4
MB

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