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Zusatztext The aim of this volume of essays, according to the introduction by Laura Marcus and David Bradshaw, is to open up the many dimensions and arenas of modernist movement and movements... All in all, then, this is a highly valuable collection of essays which will likely offer many provocative new avenues for scholars of twentieth-century modernisms, especially literary modernism. Informationen zum Autor Laura Marcus is Goldsmiths' Professor of English at the University of Oxford, where she is a Professorial Fellow of New College. Her book publications include Auto/biographical Discourses: Theory, Criticism, Practice (1994), Virginia Woolf: Writers and their Work (1997/2004), The Tenth Muse: Writing about Cinema in the Modernist Period (2007; awarded the 2008 James Russell Lowell Prize of the Modern Language Association), Dreams of Modernity: Psychoanalysis, Literature, Cinema (2015), and, as co-editor, The Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century English Literature (2004). Her current research project includes a study of the concept of 'rhythm' in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, in a range of disciplinary contexts. David Bradshaw is Professor of English Literature at Oxford University. In addition to editing a range of modernist texts, including Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, The Waves, A Room of One's Own (with Stuart N. Clarke), and The Good Soldier, he has published numerous articles on modernist writing and culture, and edited The Hidden Huxley (1994), A Concise Companion to Modernism (2003), A Companion to Modernist Literature and Culture (2006; with Kevin J. H. Dettmar), The Cambridge Companion to E. M. Forster (2007), and Prudes on the Prowl: Fiction and Obscenity in England, 1850 to the Present Day (2013; with Rachel Potter). Rebecca Roach is a postdoctoral researcher on the ERC-funded project, 'Ego-Media: The Impact of New Media on Forms and Practices of Self-Presentation' (2014-2019) at King's College London. Her current project draws on theories of life writing, the public sphere, linguistics, information theory, and history of the book/material culture to explore representations of communication, collaboration and relational selfhood in literature in the era of computing. Prior to joining Kings, Rebecca completed her doctorate at Oxford University (2014). Her thesis, entitled 'Transatlantic Conversations: The Art of the Interview in Britain and America' assessed the role of the interview form within Anglophone literature from the late nineteenth century to the present day. Klappentext 0 Zusammenfassung The essays in Moving Modernisms open up the many dimensions and arenas of modernist movement and movements: spatial, geographical and political: affective and physiological; temporal and epochal; technological, locomotive and metropolitan; aesthetic and representational. They point to the realities, and fantasies, of movement in modernist culture....
List of contents
- List of Figures
 
- List of Contributors
 
- 1: Laura Marcus and David Bradshaw: Introduction
 
- Part I: Times and Places
 
- 2: Andrew Thacker: Placing Modernism
 
- 3: Tim Armstrong: Micromodernism: Towards a Modernism of Disconnection
 
- 4: David Ayers: Modernism's Missing Modernity
 
- Part II: Horizons
 
- 5: Wai Chee Dimock: Gibraltar and Beyond: James Joyce, Ezra Pound, Paul Bowles
 
- 6: Robert J. C. Young: Restless Modernisms: D. H. Lawrence Caught in the Shadow of Gramsci
 
- Part III: Energies and Quantities
 
- 7: Enda Duffy: High Energy Modernism
 
- 8: Steven Connor: Numbers it is: The Musemathematics of Modernism
 
- 9: Olga Taxidou: Do Not Call Me A Dancer', (Isadora Duncan, 1929): Dance and Modernist Experimentation
 
- Part IV: Avant-Gardes
 
- 10: Marjorie Perloff: A Cessation of Resemblances : Stein / Picasso / Duchamp
 
- 11: Jean-Michel Rabaté: A Cage Went in Search of a Bird. How do Kafka s and Joyce s Aphorisms Move Usa
 
- Part V: Discourses/Voices
 
- 12: Rachel Potter: Literature Knows No Frontiers: Modernism and Free Speech
 
- 13: Ken Hirschkop: Moved by Language in Motion: Discourse, Myth, and Public Opinion in the Early Twentieth Century
 
- 14: Patricia Waugh: Precarious Voices: Moderns, Moods, and Moving Epochs
 
- Part VI: Motion Studies
 
- 15: Paul K. Saint-Amour: Stillness and Altitude: René Clair s Paris Qui Dort
 
- 16: Garrett Stewart: Frame Advance Modernism: The Case of Fritz Lang s M
 
- 17: Deborah Longworth: Perpetual Motion: Speed, Spectacle, and Cycle Racing
 
- 18: Julian Murphet: A Desire Named Streetcar