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Consumption and Depression in Gertrude Stein, Louis Zukovsky and Ezra Pound
216x138 mm
9780333714515
29 Jan 1999
296 Pages
578
0333714512
£85.00
Description:
The career of Ezra Pound has come to represent the political tendencies which, it has been claimed, are inherent to modernist aesthetics. But the political impulses of the modernists cannot be adequately represented by Pound's extreme positions; Pound's own political activities and commitments, in fact, do not adequately articulate the contradictory attitudes and beliefs that made them possible. By contrasting Pound's politics to the political values and beliefs of Gertrude Stein and Louis Zukofsky during the Depression, this book argues that these three very different writers share a complex set of attitudes and beliefs that are grounded in a collective social fantasy corresponding to the rise of mass consumption and the emergency of corporate social forms.
Contents:
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
Consumption and Depression (Stein and Pound)
Gertrude Stein's Great Depression
Value From Obligation (Stein)
'New Deal or Steal' (Zukofsky and Pound)
Animated Things (Zakofesky and Pound)
Endnotes
Authors:
LUKE CARSON is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada. He has published articles on modern and contemporary American poetry.