Ethnic Modernism

前表紙
Harvard University Press, 2008 - 324 ページ

In the first half of the twentieth century, the United States moved from the periphery to the center of global cultural production. At the same time, technologies of dissemination evolved rapidly, and versions of modernism emerged as dominant art forms. How did African American, European immigrant, and other minority writers take part in these developments that also transformed the United States, giving it an increasingly multicultural self-awareness? This book attempts to address this question in a series of innovative and engaging close readings of major texts by Gertrude Stein, Mary Antin, Jean Toomer, O. E. R lvaag, Nathan Asch, Henry Roth, Richard Wright, Zora Neale Hurston, Pietro di Donato, Jerre Mangione, John Hersey, and Leo Szilard, as well as briefer examinations of many other authors and works, against the background of international political developments, the rise of modernism in the visual arts, and the ascendancy of Ernest Hemingway as a model for prose writers.

In many of Werner Sollors's sensitive readings, single sentences and paragraphs serve as the representative formal units of prose works, while throughout Ethnic Modernism the trolley (now a cute-seeming object of nostalgia) emerges with surprising frequency as a central thematic emblem of modernity.

 

目次もくじ

Introduction
1
Gertrude Stein and Negro Sunshine
17
Ethnic Lives and Lifelets
35
Ethnic Themes Modern Themes
59
6
78
American Languages
85
Modernism Ethnic Labeling and the Quest
101
10
109
13
150
Immigrant Literature and Totalitarianism
183
Was Modernism Antitotalitarian?
207
Grand Central Terminal
235
Notes
253
Bibliography
283
Acknowledgments
301
著作ちょさくけん

Hemingway Spoken Here
128

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著者ちょしゃについて (2008)

Werner Sollors is Henry B. and Anne M. Cabot Professor of English Literature and Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University.

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