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American Literature

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Title: American Literature


1
American Literature
030533/4/5, 5th Dec. 2006
2
Lecture Ten
  • The American Modernism
  • (I)
  • (1914 - 1945)

3
  • Part One Introduction
  • I. The background of producing modernism
  • Charles Darwins The Origin of Species (1859)
    radically altered the nineteenth century romantic
    view that nature, especially human nature, was
    benign.
  • Herbert Spencer and the "Gospel of Wealth" or
    Social Darwinism reconciled individualism with
    capitalism by suggesting that the interests of
    each citizen as well as the interests of the
    state are served by free economic expansion.
  • The work of Marx, and Freud, as well as other
    great intellectual explorers and rebels had
    mounted an assault against orthodox religious
    faith that lasted into the twentieth century.
  • World War I in particular deepened doubt and
    reauthorized disillusionment.
  • Another source of disillusionment was the rapid
    transformation of American society that
    accelerated with World War I.

4
  • II. Modernism? http//www.newadvent.org/cathen/104
    15a.htm
  • Modernism is a cultural movement that generally
    includes the progressive art and architecture,
    design, literature, music, dance, painting and
    other visual arts which emerged in the beginning
    of the 20th century , particularly in the years
    following World War I. It was a movement of
    artists and designers who rebelled against late
    19th century academic and historicist tradition,
    and embraced the new economic, social and
    political aspects of the emerging modern world.
  • The avant-garde movements that followed-including
    Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Cubism,
    Futurism, Expressionism, Constructivism, De
    Stijl, and Abstract Expressionism-are generally
    defined as Modernist.

5
  • Modernism in literature is not easily summarized,
    but the key elements are experimentation,
    anti-realism, individualism and a stress on the
    cerebral rather than emotive aspects.
  • The work of Modernist writers is characterized by
    showing the disenchantment, dislocation, and
    alienation of men in the world, and by the
    emphasis on experimentation and formalism and
    objectivism which are, in most cases, a reaction
    to the cataclysm known as the Modern Age.
  • Among American writers, the best-known Modernists
    are T.S.Eliot, Ezra Pound, F.Scott Fitzgerald,
    Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner and so on.

6
  • III. The Schools of American Modernism
  • Modern poetry experiments in form (Imagism)
  • Prose Writing modern realism (the Lost
    Generation)
  • Novels of Social Awareness
  • The Harlem Renaissance
  • The Fugitives and New Criticism
  • The 20th Century American Drama

7
Part Two Modern poetry experiments in form
(Imagism)
8
  • I. Imagism
  • It is a Movement in U.S. and English poetry
    characterized by the use of concrete language and
    figures of speech, modern subject matter,
    metrical freedom, and avoidance of romantic or
    mystical themes, aiming at clarity of expression
    through the use of precise visual images.
  • It grew out of the Symbolist Movement in 1912 and
    was initially led by Ezra Pound, Amy Lowell, and
    others.
  • The Imagist manifesto came out in 1912 showed
    three Imagist poetic principles direct treatment
    of the thing(no fuss, frill, or ornament),
    exclusion of superfluous words(precision and
    economy of expression), the rhythm of the musical
    phrase rather than the sequence of a
    metronome(free verse form and music).

9
  • Pound defined an image as that which presents an
    intellectual and emotional complex in an instant
    of time, and later he extended this definition
    when he stated that an image was a vortex or
    cluster of fused ideas, endowed with energy.
  • There existed great influence of Chinese poetry
    on the Imagist movement. Imagists found value in
    Chinese poetry was because Chinese poetry is, by
    virtue of the ideographic and pictographic nature
    of the Chinese language, essentially imagistic
    poetry.

10
  • II. The Major Representatives of the Modern
    Poetry
  • Ezra Pound (1885- 1972)
  • T.S.Eliot (1888 - 1965)
  • Wallace Stevens (1879 - 1955)
  • William Carlos Williams (1883 - 1963)
  • Robert Frost (1874 - 1963)
  • E.E.Cummings (1894 - 1963)

11
?. Ezra Pound (1885 - 1972)
12
  • 1. His Life
  • Born in Idaho in 1885 and raised in Pennsylvania,
    Ezra Pound spent most of his life in Europe and
    became one of the 20th century's most influential
    -- and controversial -- poets in the English
    language.
  • Pound was undoubtedly a genius. Before he
    graduated from university, he had mastered 9
    languages as well as English grammar and
    literature. After college in Pennsylvania and a
    brief stint as a teacher, in 1908 Pound travelled
    to Venice and then to London, where he refined
    his aesthetic sensibilities and edited the
    anthology Des Imagistes (1914).
  • Pound championed the likes of T. S. Eliot,
    William Carlos Williams and James Joyce and,
    influenced by Chinese and Japanese poetry,
    advocated free meter and a more economical use of
    words and images in poetic expression, leading
    the Imagist Movement of poetry.

13
  • He moved to Paris in 1920 and got acquainted with
    Gertrude Stein and her circle of friends (which
    included Ernest Hemingway and Pablo Picasso),
    then settled in Italy in 1924.
  • Enamored with Benito Mussolini, Pound made
    anti-American radio broadcasts during World War
    II. He was arrested as a traitor in 1945 and
    initially confined in Pisa. He was then sent to
    the U.S., where he was deemed mentally unfit to
    stand trial for treason.
  • Pound was confined for 12 years in a hospital
    (actually prison) for the criminally insane in
    Washington. During this time he translated works
    of ancient Greek and ancient Chinese literature.
    While in prison, he was awarded a prestigious
    poetry prize in 1949 for his last Cantos.
  • In 1958 he returned to Italy, where he continued
    to write and make translations until he died in
    1972.

14
  • 2. His works
  • Pound wrote 70 books and over 1500 articles in
    his life.
  • His major work of poetry is The Cantos, a long
    poem which he wrote in sections between 1915 and
    1945.
  • 3. His masterpiece The Cantos
  • In this poem, he traces the rise and fall of
    eastern and western empires, the destruction
    caused by greed and materialism.
  • He deplores the corruption of America after the
    heroic time of Jefferson,
  • The last part, produced from his own suffering,
    is the most moving.

15
  • 4. His poetic features
  • Ezra Pound is often considered as the poet who is
    most responsible for defining and promoting a
    modernist aesthetic in poetry. His critical
    theories have great influence on many important
    American and British poets.
  • Throughout the 1920s, he was much involved in
    most of the major artistic movements. He was the
    leader of the Imagist school in poetry. He
    believed that good poetry was based on images
    rather than ideas.
  • As an imagist himself, he advocated and followed
    the imagist credo, writing succinct verse of dry
    clarity and hard outline in which an exact visual
    image made a total poetic statement.
  • His technique came from classical Chinese and
    Japanese poetry. On one hand the stressed
    clarity, precision, and economy of language. On
    the other hand, Pound mused the traditional rhyme
    and meter in order to, as Pound put it, compose
    in the sequence of the musical phrase, not in the
    sequence of metronome.

16
  • A Chinese imagistic poetry
  • Autumn
  • Evening crows perch on old trees wreathed with
    withered vine,
  • Water of a stream flows by a family cottage near
    a tiny bridge.
  • A lean horse walks on an ancient road in western
    breeze,
  • The sun is setting in the west,
  • The heart-broken one is at the end of the Earth.
  • ?????
  • ???
  • ????????,????????,
  • ????????,????,???????

17
  • There are nine nouns or nominal phrases placed in
    the first three lines in isolation from each
    other.
  • To appreciate the poem you should link the scenes
    produced through these words up in your
    imagination by way like montage in movie art. So,
    a vivid picture like a story will be displayed in
    your mind In sight of the beautiful scenery with
    withered vine, old tree, crow returning home at
    dusk, small bridge, river and households, a man,
    accompanied by west wind and a thin horse on the
    ancient road, is suffering from homesickness

18
  • 5. In a Station of the Metro
  • The apparition of these faces in the crowd
  • Petals on a wet, black bough.
  • ?????????????,
  • ??????????????

19
  • About the poem
  • The Metro is the underground railway of Paris.
  • The word apparition, with its double meaning,
    binds the two aspects of the observation
    together
  • Apparition meaning appearance, in the sense of
    something which appears, or shows up something
    which can be clearly observed.
  • Apparition meaning something which seems real but
    perhaps is not real something ghostly which
    cannot be clearly observed.

20
  • The poem is an observation of the poet of the
    human faces seen in a Paris subway station. It
    looks to be a modern adoption of the Japanese
    haiku.
  • He tries to render exactly his observation of
    human faces seen in an underground railway
    station. He sees the faces, turned variously
    toward light and darkness, like flower petals
    which are half absorbed by, half resisting, the
    wet, dark texture of a bough.
  • Repeating it, you can have a colorful picture,
    also you can feel the beauty of music through
    its repetition of different vowels and
    consonants, such as /p/ and /au/. Especially the
    repetition of /e/ in the second line emphasize
    its sense of music.

21
  • In this brief poem, Pound uses the fewest
    possible words to convey an accurate image,
    according to the principles of the Imagists.
    Pound wrote an account of its composition, which
    claims that the poems form was determined by the
    experience that inspired it, evolving organically
    rather than being chosen arbitrarily.
  • Whether truth or myth, the piece has become a
    famous document in the history of Imagism.

22
  • Homework
  • Search for Fitzgeralds personal information and
    report to the class.
  • Read his masterpiece The Great Gatsby and give a
    simple summary.
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