Ecology of Modernism

American Environments and Avant-Garde Poetics

Joshua Schuster author Hank Lazer editor Charles Bernstein editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:The University of Alabama Press

Published:30th Sep '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Ecology of Modernism cover

The Ecology of Modernism explores the unexpected absence of an envi­ronmental ethic in American modernist and avant-garde poetics, given its keen concern with an ecological esthetic. Joshua Schuster explains why American modernism was never green.

In The Ecology of Modernism, Joshua Schuster examines the rela­tionships of key modernist writers, poets, and musicians to nature, industrial development, and pollution. He posits that that the curious failure of modernist poets to develop an environmental ethnic was a deliberate choice and not an inadvertent omission.

In his opening passage, Schuster boldly invokes lines from Walt Whit­man’s “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry,” which echo as a paean to pollution: “Burn high your fires, foundry chimneys! cast black shadows at night­fall!” Schuster labels this theme “regeneration through pollution” and demonstrates how this motif recurs in modernist compositions. This tolerance for, if not actual exultation of, the by-products of industri­alization hindered modernist American artists, writers, and musicians from embracing environmentalist agendas.

Schuster provides specific case studies about Marianne Moore and her connection of fables with animal rights; Gertrude Stein and concepts of nature in her avant-garde poetics; early blues music and poetry and the issue of how environmental disasters (floods, droughts, pestilence) affected black farmers and artists in the American South; and John Cage, who extends the modernist avant-garde project formally but critiques it at the same time for failing to engage with ecology. A fas­cinating afterword about the role of oil modernist literary production rounds out this work.

Schuster masterfully shines a light on the modernist interval between the writings of bucolic and nature-extolling Romantics and the emer­gence of a self-conscious green movement in the 1960s. This reward­ing work shows that the reticence of modernist poets in the face of resource depletion, pollution, animal rights, and other ecological traumas is highly significant.

ISBN: 9780817358297

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 370g

272 pages