The
Centers of Modernism
1.
Stylistic innovations - disruption of traditional syntax and form.
2.
Artist's self-consciousness about questions of form and structure.
3.
Obsession with primitive material and attitudes.
4.
International perspective on cultural matters.
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| Modern Attitudes
1.
The artist is generally less appreciated but more sensitive, even more heroic,
than the average person.
2.
The artist challenges tradition and reinvigorates it.
3. A
breaking away from patterned responses and predictable forms.
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| Contradictory Elements
1.
Democratic and elitist.
2.
Traditional and anti-tradition.
3.
National jingoism and provinciality versus the celebration of international
culture.
4.
Puritanical and repressive elements versus freer expression in sexual and
political matters.
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| Literary Achievements
1.
Dramatization of the plight of women.
2.
Creation of a literature of the urban experience.
3.
Continuation of the pastoral or rural spirit.
4.
Continuation of regionalism and local color.
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| Modern Themes
1.
Collectivism versus the authority of the individual.
2.
The impact of the 1918 Bolshevik Revolution in Russia.
3.
The Jazz Age.
4.
The passage of 19th Amendment in 1920 giving women the right to vote.
5.
Prohibition of the production, sale, and consumption of alcoholic beverages,
1920-33.
6.
The stock-market crash of 1929 and the Depression of the 1930s and their
impact.
7.
WWI amd the concept of total war. Mustard
gas, Aerial bombardment, machine guns.
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| Modernism and the Self
1. In
this period, the chief characteristic of the self is one of alienation. The
character belongs to a "lost generation" (Gertrude Stein), suffers
from a "dissociation of sensibility" (T. S. Eliot), and who has
"a Dream deferred" (Langston Hughes).
2.
Alienation led to an awareness about one's inner life.
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| Modernism and the New Negro Renaissance
(see my Introduction to the
Harlem Renaissance <http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap9/9intro.html>)
1.
The relationship between the two is complex.
2.
They both share the important motif of alienation.
3.
However, American modernism is inspired by the European avant-garde art; the
Renaissance represents the unique and distinct experience of black Americans.
4.
Modernism borrows from the Renaissance the themes of marginality and the use of
folk or the so-called "primitive" material.
5.
The use of the blues tradition - important for the Renaissance - is not shared
by white modernists; considered too limiting (mere complaint about one's
repressed and exploited condition), the blues tradition represents images and
themes of liberation and revolt.
6.
This relationship requires reevaluation; the Renaissance is important for black
and white readers and writers.
(For
a detailed discussion of the above-stated elements, read pages 887-914 in Paul
Lauter, ed., The Heath Anthology of
American Literature, Vol. 2, Fourth Ed., 2002.)
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| Study Questions
1. Of all the 19th
century authors, Walt Whitman has perhaps the most influence on 20th century
letters. How has this influence manifested itself in thought and art of modern
American poets?
2. Choosing several
different works, discuss changes in American writers' attitudes toward God or
religion in the twentieth century.
3. Compare an early
nineteenth-century poem (such as Bryant's "Thanatopsis") with an early
twentieth-century poem (Frost's "Directive"). Discuss the way both
poems reflect dramatic radical shifts in paradigm or perspective in their time.
4. Choose any three
twentieth-century works and show how they respond to the following quotation
from Wallace Stevens's Of Modern Poetry: The poem of the mind in the act of
finding / What will suffice. It has not always had/To find: the scene was set;
it repeated what/Was in the script.
5. Explain the parallel
concerns in the following statements: (a) "The poem is a momentary stay
against confusion" (Frost, The Figure a Poem Makes); (b) "These
fragments I have shored against my ruins" (Eliot, The Waste Land); (c)
"Poetry is the supreme fiction, madame" (Stevens, A High-Toned Old
Christian Woman).
6. Examine traditional
twentieth-century lyric poems by Robinson and Millay. How does each of these
poets turn traditional form to the service of twentieth-century themes?
7. Read a short story by
a British modernist writer, such as Lawrence, Woolf, or Joyce. Compare and
contrast it with a story by an American modernist.
8. Many modernist lyric
poems are about poetic form itself. Analyze one of the following poems (or any
other poems by Frost, Stevens, or Williams) with particular attention to the
poet's awareness of form: The Wood-Pile, A Quiet Normal Life, or To Elsie.
9. Analyze the use of
poetic forms by modernist poets. Examine the following: Frost's sonnets, Mowing,
The Oven Bird, Once by the Pacific, Design, or The Gift Outright (or find and
read all of Frost's sonnets in his complete poems and write about his use of the
form); Stevens's use of the ballad stanza in Anecdote of the Jar or his use of
tercet stanza form in The Snow Man and A Quiet Normal Life; Williams's
near-sonnet The Dance; Pound's sonnet, A Virginal, or the poem he calls a
villanelle although it is not, Villanelle: The Psychological Hour; or Bishop's
nearly perfect villanelle, One Art.
10. Examine modernist
poets' use of traditional metric forms. Analyze what Frost does to and with
iambic pentameter in Desert Places or how Stevens uses it in The Idea of Order
at Key West.
11. In the introduction
to Marianne Moore in the Norton AAL, Nina Baym writes, "Pound worked with
the clause, Williams with the line, H. D. with the image, and Stevens and Stein
with the word; Moore, unlike these modernist contemporaries, used the entire
stanza as the unit of her poetry." In an out-of-class essay, choose poems
by each of these writers that will allow you to further explain the distinctions
Baym creates in this statement.
12. In British poetry,
Robert Browning developed and perfected the dramatic monologue. Find and discuss
dramatic monologues by several American modernists. Evaluate their uses of, or
variations on, Browning's form.
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| 13. Although American poets have not yet - according to critical consensus -
produced an epic poem, several twentieth-century poets have made the attempt.
Research features of classical epic poetry and identify epic characteristics in
Pound's The Cantos, H. D.'s The Walls Do Not Fall, Eliot's Four Quartets, and
Crane's The Bridge.
14. Locate and read one
of the following modernist poetic statements, and then analyze one of the
author's anthologized poems in light of what he has written about craft: Frost,
The Figure a Poem Makes (included in the Norton AAL); Stevens, from The
Necessary Angel; Williams, Edgar Allan Poe; Pound, A Treatise on Metre or
another essay from The ABC of Reading; and Crane, General Aims and Theories.
15. Compare and contrast
the realism of a twentieth-century story with the realism of Clemens, Howells,
James, or Wharton. Analyze Sherwood Anderson's The Egg, William Faulkner's Barn
Burning, or Ernest Hemingway's The Snows of Kilimanjaro, paying particular
attention to the twentieth-century writer's innovations in point of view or use
of symbolism.
16. In Suzanne Juhasz's
framework for twentieth-century women poets (see discussion in the Marianne
Moore section of Chapter 7 in this Guide), she suggests a progression from Moore
to Muriel Rukeyser to Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton to Adrienne Rich in terms of
the particular writer's willingness to write about women's experience in poetry.
Choosing specific poems for your focus, trace this progression and comment on
its usefulness as a framework.
17. Although
traditionally the period 1914&endash;1945 has focused on modernism, numerous
writers during the period wrote political poetry that may have been influenced
by modernism but reflects other artistic intent. Analyze representative poems by
Genevieve Taggard, Muriel Rukeyser, Sterling Brown, and Langston Hughes for
evidence of political intent in poetry, and comment on the relationship between
this poetry and what we call modernism.
18. Although the
modernist poets do not explicitly concern themselves with gender, race, or class
issues, there are exceptions to this statement. Discuss the relationship between
modernism and gender in H. D., race in Langston Hughes, and class in Muriel
Rukeyser.
19. While writers like
Pound and Eliot were concerned with tracing the origins of modernist
consciousness in classical mythology, other writers were more interested in
becoming assimilated into American society. Identify and discuss the issues of
concern to writers, fictional characters, or lyric voices who concern themselves
with issues of immigration and assimilation.
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