Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Modernist Legacies“Kinked Up Like It Wants to Bark”: Contemporary British Poetry at the Tomb of the Poète Maudit

Modernist Legacies: “Kinked Up Like It Wants to Bark”: Contemporary British Poetry at the Tomb of... [As the title of this book is Legacies of Modernism, and the etymology of “legacy” takes us to Old French, it seems appropriate to the renewed interest in late nineteenth-century French literary culture in British poets writing in the 1990s and the first decade of the noughties—a different fin de siècle, but one that has sought the more famous literary period as some kind of grounding for poetic endeavor, or at least as a way of re-contextualizing their own social and aesthetic moment(s). The figure of the poète maudit in particular channels a whole series of ideas and preoccupations concerning the poet’s relationship to society under Capitalist modernity and offers an opportunity to establish what kind of a legacy these foundational ideas have had upon contemporary vanguard poetry.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

Modernist Legacies“Kinked Up Like It Wants to Bark”: Contemporary British Poetry at the Tomb of the Poète Maudit

Editors: Lang, Abigail; Smith, David Nowell
Modernist Legacies — Dec 22, 2015

Loading next page...
 
/lp/springer-journals/modernist-legacies-kinked-up-like-it-wants-to-bark-contemporary-i0uIDd4wdf

References (4)

Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan US
Copyright
© Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Nature America Inc. 2015
ISBN
978-1-349-56699-0
Pages
95 –108
DOI
10.1057/9781137488756_6
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[As the title of this book is Legacies of Modernism, and the etymology of “legacy” takes us to Old French, it seems appropriate to the renewed interest in late nineteenth-century French literary culture in British poets writing in the 1990s and the first decade of the noughties—a different fin de siècle, but one that has sought the more famous literary period as some kind of grounding for poetic endeavor, or at least as a way of re-contextualizing their own social and aesthetic moment(s). The figure of the poète maudit in particular channels a whole series of ideas and preoccupations concerning the poet’s relationship to society under Capitalist modernity and offers an opportunity to establish what kind of a legacy these foundational ideas have had upon contemporary vanguard poetry.]

Published: Dec 22, 2015

Keywords: Barnacle Goose; Capitalist Modernity; Foundational Idea; British Poet; Latent Fire

There are no references for this article.