1992: Literature, Culture, Politics

Jean-Michel Rabaté 2015


E-Book: 298 English Pages

Publisher: CUP

Price: 2000 Toman

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1922: Literature, Culture, Politics examines key aspects of culture and history in 1922, a year made famous by the publication of several modernist masterpieces, such as T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land and James Joyce’s Ulysses. Individual chapters written by leading scholars offer new contexts for the year’s significant works of art, philosophy, politics, and literature. 1922 also analyzes both the political and intellectual forces that shaped the cultural interactions of that privileged moment. Although this volume takes post-WWI Europe as its chief focus, American artists and authors also receive thoughtful consideration. In its multiplicity of views, 1922 challenges misconceptions about the “Lost Generation” of cultural pilgrims who flocked to Paris and Berlin in the 1920s, thus stressing the wider influence of that momentous year.


Book Description

1922: Literature, Culture, Politics examines key aspects of culture and history in 1922, a year made famous by the publication of several modernist masterpieces such as T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land and James Joyce’s Ulysses. Individual chapters written by leading scholars offer new contexts for the year’s significant works of art, philosophy, politics, and literature.


 

About the Author

Jean-Michel RabatéJean-Michel Rabaté, Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Pennsylvania since 1992, is a curator of Slought Foundation, a Philadelphia gallery that he co-founded. He is also an editor of the Journal of Modern Literature and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has authored or edited more than thirty books on modernism, psychoanalysis and philosophy. Recent books include Crimes of the Future and The Cambridge Introduction to Literature and Psychoanalysis (Cambridge, 2014). Forthcoming is The Value of Samuel Beckett.