Modernist Circumnavigations

Modernist Circumnavigations
Author: Kevin Riordan
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2022-05-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783030962418

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This book shows how Jules Verne’s Around the World in Eighty Days changed the global imagination. Through his novel, the world was converted into a personal itinerary, scaled to the individual traveller and, by extension, to the individual reader. Exploring Verne’s modern legacy, this study shows how subsequent generations of artists and writers took on Around the World in Eighty Days as an adaptable guidebook to the modern world. It investigates how Verne’s work leads its reader beyond the book itself. It considers Verne’s place in world literature, traces some of the many real reenactments of Verne’s itinerary, and recalls the theatrical adaptations of Verne’s story. Published to coincide with the 500th anniversary of the first circumnavigation and the 150th anniversary of Verne’s novel, this book offers new insights into the largely overlooked influence of Verne on twentieth-century literature and culture and on the field of global modernism.

The Routledge Companion to Theatre Fiction

The Routledge Companion to Theatre Fiction
Author: Graham Wolfe
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 445
Release: 2023-11-14
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781000951936

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Novelists have long been attracted to theatre. Some have pursued success on the stage, but many have sought to combine these worlds, entering theatre through their fiction, setting stages on their novels’ pages, and casting actors, directors, and playwrights as their protagonists. The Routledge Companion to Theatre-Fiction has convened an international community of scholars to explore the remarkable array of novelists from many eras and parts of the world who have created fiction from the stuff of theatre, asking what happens to theatre on the pages of novels, and what happens to novels when they collaborate with theatre. From J. W. Goethe to Louisa May Alcott, Mikhail Bulgakov, Virginia Woolf, and Margaret Atwood, some of history’s most influential novelists have written theatre-fiction, and this Companion discusses many of these figures from new angles. But it also spotlights writers who have received less critical attention, such as Dorothy Leighton, Agustín de Rojas Villandrando, Ronald Firbank, Syed Mustafa Siraj, Li Yu, and Vicente Blasco Ibañez, bringing their work into conversation with a vital field. A valuable resource for students, scholars, and admirers of both theatre and novels, The Routledge Companion to Theatre-Fiction offers a wealth of new perspectives on topics of increasing critical concern, including intermediality, theatricality, antitheatricality, mimesis, diegesis, and performativity.

Singapore Flings

Singapore Flings
Author: Ira Nadel
Publsiher: Epigram Books
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2024
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9789814984843

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Literary greats have long visited Singapore, fascinated by its culture and history. Explore the experiences of writers like Anton Chekhov, Rabindranath Tagore, Noël Coward, Isabella Bird, Pablo Neruda and Joseph Conrad, among others, and discover how Singapore remained a lasting part of their creative imagination.

Staging Modernist Lives

Staging Modernist Lives
Author: Sasha Colby
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2017-02-01
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780773548961

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Three modernist women, H.D. (Hilda Doolittle, 1886-1961), Mina Loy (1882-1966), and Nancy Cunard (1896-1965), came to define the interwar avant-garde through their experimental writing and unconventional pursuits. In Staging Modernist Lives, Sasha Colby dramatizes these women’s lives and writing in three new plays that traverse the origins of modernism, Parisian literary circles, two world wars, the Spanish Civil War, and race and gender relations in the first half of the twentieth century. Leveraging each writer’s autobiographical materials, the plays explore the work of H.D., Loy, and Cunard as artists, publishers, and activists, their quests for self-definition amid political and historical upheaval, and their development as modernists among mentors, detractors, lovers, and friends including Bryher Ellerman, Ezra Pound, Sigmund Freud, Gertrude Stein, Arthur Cravan, D.H. Lawrence, and Pablo Neruda. Navigating the emerging field of research-creation, Staging Modernist Lives maps the critical terrain for dramatized literary inquiry. Bridging scholarship and creative practice, extant biographical drama and the possibilities of research-theatre, Staging Modernist Lives demonstrates how performance can deliver literary history to new audiences - and how research in turn reinvigorates itself through performance.

Modernism and Homer

Modernism and Homer
Author: Leah Culligan Flack
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 247
Release: 2015-09-16
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781107108035

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A comparative study exploring the particular importance of Homer in the emergence, development, and promotion of modernist writing.

The Modernist Traveler

The Modernist Traveler
Author: Kimberley J. Healey
Publsiher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2003-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0803224125

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The Modernist Traveler considers figures whose writing about travel rebelled against a literary tradition of exoticism, adventure stories, and novelistic travelogues. Instead these writers initiated a modernist strain in travel writing and a shift in the literary establishment and the culture at large. Kimberley J. Healey focuses on those French writers and thinkers who traveled in order to experience a displacement of both the inner self and the physical body while writing against the prevalent tradition of travel literature. ø The modern self, modern time, colonial spaces, and the physical body are Healey?s concerns as she reads works by Victor Segalen, Paul Morand, Blaise Cendrars, Henri Michaux, Saint-John Perse, Guillaume Apollinaire, Paul Nizan, Albert Londres, Andre Malraux, Valäry Larbaud, and Isabelle Eberhardt. This book shows how, in the field of French literature, these texts about travel best capture the modernist experience of being alone in a world of new technologies, cultural diversity, and anxiety about the self.

Aspects of Modernism

Aspects of Modernism
Author: Andreas Fischer,Martin Heusser,Thomas Herrmann
Publsiher: Gunter Narr Verlag
Total Pages: 366
Release: 1997
Genre: Literature, Modern
ISBN: 382335180X

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Modernist Time Ecology

Modernist Time Ecology
Author: Jesse Matz
Publsiher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2018-12-03
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781421427003

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Modernist Time Ecology is a deeply interdisciplinary book that changes what we think literature and the arts can do for the world at large.