The Geopoetics of Modernism
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University Press of Florida
Published:28th Feb '15
Currently unavailable, our supplier has not provided us a restock date

The Geopoetics of Modernism is the first book to illuminate the links between American modernism and the geographic discourse of the time. Rebecca Walsh explores Walt Whitman, Gertrude Stein, Langston Hughes, and H.D.’s engagements with contemporary geographic theories and sources—including the cosmological geography of Alexander von Humboldt and Mary Somerville, the environmental determinism of Ellen Churchill Semple, and mainstream textbooks and periodicals—which informed the formal and political dimensions of their work.
Walsh argues that the dominant geographic paradigms of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries gave authority to experimental writers who were breaking with other forms of authority, enabling them to create transnational forms of belonging on the exhilarating landscape of nations, continents, and the globe. By examining modernism alongside environmental determinist geography, she maps a poetic terrain where binaries such as west versus non-west or imperial center versus colonial periphery are destabilized. The Geopoetics of Modernism reveals the geographic terms through which American modernist poetry interrogated prevailing ideas of orientalism, primitivism, and American exceptionalism.
“Well-argued and crisply expounded, Walsh’s excellent book contributes generously not only to the ‘spatial turn’ in modernist studies but also to the burgeoning study of American modernism….A valuable contribution to the fundamental—but relatively unexplored—topic of geography and the production of space in American literary modernism.—Literary Geographies
ISBN: 9780813060514
Dimensions: 232mm x 158mm x 17mm
Weight: 415g
208 pages