In the short but excellent ‘Resources’ section, Alex Pestell and Sean Pryor cover key terms from ‘avant-garde’ to ‘vers libre’ - and include valuable summaries of how concepts such as ‘fascism’, ‘primitivism’, ‘race’ and ‘high modernism’ shape how we think about modernist literature - while an extensive annotated bibliography of major works of criticism provides a good grounding for students wishing to explore the subject further.
Times Literary Supplement
<i>The Bloomsbury Companion to Modernist Literature</i>, edited by Ulrika Maude and Mark Nixon, provides fresh insights. By viewing Modernist Literature through the prism of seemingly unrelated disciplines, such as economics, the Theory of Relativity, and neurology, the <i>Bloomsbury Companion</i> … reveals research synergies and provides opportunities for discovery … While geared towards the more advanced researcher, this book would certainly assist those less familiar with Modernist Literature when taking those first steps from casual readership into research. <i>The Bloomsbury Companion to Modernist Literature</i> makes it new and keeps it real.
American Reference Books Annual
[These] assembled essays and resources comprise an impressive array of frequently challenging, illuminating scholarship … [This] Companion does not settle for simply being a guide to existing knowledge, but instead blazes exciting new trails for the rest of us to follow.
Modern Language Review
The book as a whole illustrates superbly what Emily Hayman and Pericles Lewis refer to as “the persistence of modernism".
Recherche Littéraire
Acknowledgements
Contributors
1. Introduction, Ulrika Maude
Part I: Defining the Field and Research Issues
The Modernist Everyday
2. Anything but a Clean Relationship: Modernism and the Everyday, Scott McCracken
3. Geographies of Modernism, Andrew Thacker
4. Modernism and Language Scepticism, Shane Weller
5. Modernism and Emotion, Kirsty Martin
6. Myth and Religion in Modernist Literature, Michael Bell
The Arts and Cultures of Modernism
7. Modernism and Music, Tim Armstrong
8. Modernism and the Visual Arts: Kant, Bergson, Beckett, Conor Carville
9. Modernist Literature and Film, Laura Marcus
10. Modernism and Popular Culture, Lawrence Rainey
11. Modernist Magazines, Faith Binckes
12. Minding Manuscripts: Modernism, Genetic Criticism and Intertextual Cognition, Dirk Van Hulle
The Sciences and Technologies of Modernism
13. Einstein, Relativity and Literary Modernism, Paul Sheehan
14. Modernism, Sexuality and Gender, Jana Funke
15. Modernism, Neurology and the Invention of Psychoanalysis Ulrika Maude
16. Modernism, Psychoanalysis and other Psychologies, Laura Salisbury
17. Modernism and Technology, Julian Murphet
The Geopolitics and Economics of Modernism
18. Can there be a Global Modernism? Emily Hayman and Pericles Lewis
19. A Departure from Modernism: Stylistic Strategies in Modern Peripheral Literatures as Symptom, Mediation and Critique of Modernity, Benita Parry
20. Modernist Literature and Politics, Tyrus Miller
21. A New Sense of Value: Modernism and Economics, Ronald Schleifer
Part II: Resources
22. A to Z of Key Words, Alex Pestell and Sean Pryor
23. Annotated Bibliography, Alexander Howard
Chronology
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Ulrika Maude s Professor of Modern Literature at the University of Bristol, where she also directs the Centre for Health, Humanities and Science. Her publications include Beckett, Technology and the Body (2009), Beckett and Phenomenology (2009) and The Cambridge Companion to the Body in Literature (2015).
Mark Nixon is Associate Professor in Modern Literature at the University of Reading, UK. He is Co-Director of the Beckett International Foundation, Editor in Chief of the Journal of Beckett Studies and Co-Director of the Beckett Digital Manuscript Project.