Modernism and Colonialism

Modernism and Colonialism
Author: Richard Begam,Michael Moses
Publsiher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 348
Release: 2007-10-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0822340380

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The essays in Modernism and Colonialism offer revisionary accounts of major British and Irish literary modernists relation to colonialism.

Colonialism Modernity

Colonialism   Modernity
Author: Paul Gillen,Devleena Ghosh
Publsiher: UNSW Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2007
Genre: History
ISBN: 0868407356

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Few books tell such a broad global history using an interdisciplinary approach that blends historical and cultural scholarship. Author based at UTS.

Mapping Modernisms

Mapping Modernisms
Author: Elizabeth Harney,Ruth B. Phillips
Publsiher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 432
Release: 2018-11-16
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780822372615

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Mapping Modernisms brings together scholars working around the world to address the modern arts produced by indigenous and colonized artists. Expanding the contours of modernity and its visual products, the contributors illustrate how these artists engaged with ideas of Primitivism through visual forms and philosophical ideas. Although often overlooked in the literature on global modernisms, artists, artworks, and art patrons moved within and across national and imperial borders, carrying, appropriating, or translating objects, images, and ideas. These itineraries made up the dense networks of modern life, contributing to the crafting of modern subjectivities and of local, transnationally inflected modernisms. Addressing the silence on indigeneity in established narratives of modernism, the contributors decenter art history's traditional Western orientation and prompt a re-evaluation of canonical understandings of twentieth-century art history. Mapping Modernisms is the first book in Modernist Exchanges, a multivolume project dedicated to rewriting the history of modernism and modernist art to include artists, theorists, art forms, and movements from around the world. Contributors. Bill Anthes, Peter Brunt, Karen Duffek, Erin Haney, Elizabeth Harney, Heather Igloliorte, Sandra Klopper, Ian McLean, Anitra Nettleton, Chika Okeke-Agulu, Ruth B. Phillips, W. Jackson Rushing III, Damian Skinner, Nicholas Thomas, Norman Vorano

Modernism and Empire

Modernism and Empire
Author: Howard J. Booth,Nigel Rigby
Publsiher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 356
Release: 2000-06-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 0719053072

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This is the first book to explore the fascinating relationship between literary Modernism and Empire. The book seeks to begin the task of exploring, in a sustained way, the relations between the artistic movement and colonialism. The essays range over subjects and figures such as Ireland, Africa, Joyce, Pound, Townsend Warner, Lawrence and Forster, Kipling, Woolf, and Jean Rhys.

Modernism and the Post Colonial

Modernism and the Post Colonial
Author: Peter Childs
Publsiher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 161
Release: 2007-08-09
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780826485588

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This book considers the shifts in aesthetic representation over the period 1885-1930 that coincide both with the rise of literary Modernism and imperialism's high point. Peter Childs argues that modernist literary writing should be read in terms of its response and relationship to events overseas and that it should be seen as moving towards an emergent post-colonialism instead of struggling with a residual colonial past. Each of the core chapters focuses on one key writer and discuss a range of others, including: Conrad, Lawrence, Kipling, Eliot, Woolf, Joyce, Conan Doyle and Haggard.

Colonialism and the Modernist Moment in the Early Novels of Jean Rhys

Colonialism and the Modernist Moment in the Early Novels of Jean Rhys
Author: Carol Dell'Amico
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 154
Release: 2013-10-31
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781135489007

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Colonialism and the Modernist Moment in the Early Novels of Jean Rhys explores the postcolonial significance of Rhys’s modernist period work, which depicts an urban scene more varied than that found in other canonical representations of the period. Arguing against the view that Rhys comes into her own as a colonial thinker only in the post-WWII period of her career, this study examines the austere insights gained by Rhys’s active cultivation of her fringe status vis-à-vis British social life and artistic circles, where her sharp study of the aporias of marginal lives and the violence of imperial ideology is distilled into an artistic statement positing the outcome of the imperial venture as a state of homelessness across the board, for colonized and ‘metropolitans’ alike. Bringing to view heretofore overlooked émigré populations, or their children, alongside locals, Rhys’s urbanites struggle to construct secure lives not simply as a consequence of commodification, alienation, or voluntary expatriation, but also as a consequence of marginalization and migration. This view of Rhys’s early work asserts its vital importance to postcolonial studies, an importance that has been overlooked owing to an over hasty critical consensus that only one of her early novels contains significant colonial content. Yet, as this study demonstrates, proper consideration of colonial elements long considered only incidental illuminates a colonial continuum in Rhys’s work from her earliest publications.

Nationalism Colonialism and Literature

Nationalism  Colonialism  and Literature
Author: Fredric Jameson
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 34
Release: 1988
Genre: History
ISBN: STANFORD:36105040963394

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Post colonial Intertexts

Post colonial Intertexts
Author: Geetha Ramanathan
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 116
Release: 2023-02-27
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9789004541153

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An investigation about the way how contemporary post-colonial intertexts take colonialism and euro-modernism to trial.