Planetary Avant Garde Experimental Lihb

Planetary Avant Garde  Experimental Lihb
Author: Infante Ignacio
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023-06-15
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 1442629746

Download Planetary Avant Garde Experimental Lihb Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book illuminates the history of experimental poetics in relation to the legacy of Iberian colonialism in the early twentieth century.

A Planetary Avant Garde

A Planetary Avant Garde
Author: Ignacio Infante
Publsiher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2023-04-28
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781442629769

Download A Planetary Avant Garde Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A Planetary Avant-Garde explores how experimental poetics and literature networks have aesthetically and politically responded to the legacy of Iberian colonialism across the world. The book examines avant-garde responses to Spanish and Portuguese imperialism across Europe, Latin America, West Africa, and Southeast Asia between 1909 and 1929. Ignacio Infante critically traces the hegemony and resistance to the colonial regimes of Spain and Portugal across particular avant-garde networks, expanding our understanding of Western colonial and imperial ideologies of the early twentieth century. The book extends geopolitical dimensions of the historical avant-garde into a wider transnational and planetary framework, including divergent experiences of modernity, forms of experimental poetics, and understandings of history. It sheds light on topics, such as the relation between Portuguese futurism and European colonialism in West Africa, the Latin American avant-garde’s critique of European historicism, the development of Brazilian modernism in relation to the European avant-garde, the comparative poetics of modernism in the Philippines, and the 1929 Barcelona World’s Fair. Grounded in extensive archival research, A Planetary Avant-Garde provides a new understanding of the historical avant-garde from a global and multilingual perspective.

A Cultural History of the Avant Garde in the Nordic Countries Since 1975

A Cultural History of the Avant Garde in the Nordic Countries Since 1975
Author: Anonim
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 1060
Release: 2022-08-15
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9789004515956

Download A Cultural History of the Avant Garde in the Nordic Countries Since 1975 Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The Cultural History of the Avant-Garde in the Nordic Countries Since 1975 brings the series of cultural histories of the avant-garde in the Nordic countries up to the present. It discusses revisions and continuations of historical practices since 1975.

The Danish Avant Garde and World War II

The Danish Avant Garde and World War II
Author: Kerry Greaves
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 477
Release: 2019-03-18
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780429885907

Download The Danish Avant Garde and World War II Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This is the first book to focus on Helhesten (The Hell-Horse), an avant-garde artists’ collective active during the Nazi occupation of Denmark and one of the few tangible connections between radical European art groups from the 1920s to the 1960s. The Danes’ deliberately unskilled painterly abstraction, embrace of the tradition of dansk folkelighed (the popular) and its iterations of egalitarianism and consensus reform, called for the political relevance of art and interrogated the ideologies underlying culture itself. The group’s cultural activism presents an alternative trajectory of continuity, which challenges the customary view of World War II as a moment of artistic rupture.

Physics and the Modernist Avant Garde

Physics and the Modernist Avant Garde
Author: Rachel Fountain Eames
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2023-02-09
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781350299849

Download Physics and the Modernist Avant Garde Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Developing a reading of modernist poetics centred on the three-way relationship between literature, modern physics and avant-garde art movements, this book focuses on four key poets – William Carlos Williams, Mina Loy, the Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven and Wallace Stevens – whose lives crossed paths in 20th-century New York. This book explores how modernist art movements have shaped these writers' thinking about physics in relation to their work, demonstrating how science's new ideas about measurement and how to visualize material reality provoked innovative poetic forms and images. From Einstein's visit to New York City in 1921 to the impact of the atomic bomb, the author traces the flow of ideas about physics through culture, linking the new physics with modern approaches to art found in Cubism, Futurism, Dada and Surrealism.

Magic Realism World Cinema and the Avant Garde

Magic Realism  World Cinema  and the Avant Garde
Author: Felicity Gee
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2021-04-19
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781315312798

Download Magic Realism World Cinema and the Avant Garde Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book follows the hybrid and contradictory history of magic realism through the writings of three key figures – art historian Franz Roh, novelist Alejo Carpentier, and cultural critic Fredric Jameson – drawing links between their political, aesthetic, and philosophical ideas on art’s relationship to reality. Magic realism is vast in scope, spanning almost a century, and is often confused with neighbouring styles of literature or art, most notably surrealism. The fascinating conditions of modernist Europe are complex and contradictory, a spirit that magic realism has taken on as it travels far and wide. The filmmakers and writers in this book acknowledge the importance of feeling, atmosphere, and mood to subtly provoke and resist global capitalism. Theirs is the history of magic-realist cinema. The book explores this history through the modernist avant-garde in search of a new theory of cinematic magic realism. It uncovers a resistant, geopolitical form of world cinema – moving from Europe, through Latin America and the former Soviet Union, to Thailand – that emerges from these ideas. This book is invaluable to any reader interested in world modernism(s) in relation to contemporary cinema and geopolitics. Its sustained analysis of film as a sensory, intermedial medium is of interest to scholars working across the visual arts, literature, critical theory, and film-philosophy.

Avant Gardes in Crisis

Avant Gardes in Crisis
Author: Jean-Thomas Tremblay,Andrew Strombeck
Publsiher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2021-10-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781438485171

Download Avant Gardes in Crisis Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Avant-Gardes in Crisis claims that the avant-gardes of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries are in crisis, in that artmaking both responds to political, economic, and social crises and reveals a crisis of confidence regarding resistance's very possibility. Specifically, this collection casts contemporary avant-gardes as a reaction to a crisis in the reproduction of life that accelerated in the 1970s—a crisis that encompasses living-wage rarity, deadly epidemics, and other aspects of an uneven management of vitality indexed by race, citizenship, gender, sexual orientation, class, and disability. The contributors collectively argue that a minoritarian concept of the avant-garde, one attuned to uneven patterns of resource depletion and infrastructural failure (broadly conceived), clarifies the interplay between art and politics as it has played out, for instance, in discussions of art's autonomy or institutionality. Writ large, this book seeks to restore the historical and political context for the debates on the avant-garde that have raged since the 1970s.

Late Modernism and the Avant Garde British Novel

Late Modernism and the Avant Garde British Novel
Author: Julia Jordan
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2020-03-24
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780192599209

Download Late Modernism and the Avant Garde British Novel Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In the decades following the immediately postwar period in Britain, a loose grouping of experimental writers that included Alan Burns, Christine Brooke-Rose, B. S. Johnson, and Ann Quin worked against the dominance, as they saw it, of the realist novel of the literary mainstream. Late Modernism and the Avant-Garde British Novel reassesses the experimentalism versus realism debates of the period, and finds a body of work engaged with, rather than merely antagonistic towards, the literary culture it sought to renovate. Charting these engagements, it shows how they have significance not just for our understanding of these decades but for the broader movement of the novel through the century. This volume takes some of the claims made about experimental fiction—that it is unreadable, nonlinear, elliptical, errant, plotless—and reimagines these descriptors as historically inscribed tendencies that express the period's investment in the idea of the accidental. These novels are interested in the fleeting and the fugitive, in discontinuity and shock. The experimental novel cultivates an interest in methods of representation that are oblique: attempting to conjure the world at an angle, or in the rear-view mirror; by ellipsis or evasion. These concepts—error, indeterminacy, uncertainty, accident—all bear a relation to that which evades or resists interpretation and meaning. Asking what are the wider political, ethical, and philosophical correlates of this incommensurability, Late Modernism and the Avant-Garde British Novel reads experimental literature in this light, as suffused with anxiety about its adequacy in the light of its status as necessarily imitative and derivative, and therefore redolent of the forms of not-knowing and uncertainty that mark late modernism more generally.