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A Change in the Weather

Modernist Imagination, African American Imaginary

Geoffrey Jacques author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Massachusetts Press

Published:30th Jun '09

Should be back in stock very soon

A Change in the Weather cover

This book examines the relationship of African American culture to literary modernism.This book explores the impact of African American culture on modernist poetic language by placing black literature and culture at the center of an inquiry into the genealogy of avant-garde poetics. Geoffrey Jacques looks at how blackface minstrelsy, ragtime, vernacular languages, advertising copy, Freud's idea of the Uncanny, vaudeville, the cliche, and Tin Pan Alley - style song all influenced modernist poetry.In a key insight, Jacques points out that the black urban community in the United States did not live in ghettos during the years before World War I, but in smaller enclaves spread out among the general population. This circumstance helped catalyze African American culture's dramatic and surprising impact on the emergent avant-garde. By using a wide range of theoretical tools, Jacques poses new questions about literary, cultural, and social history, the history and structure of modernist poetic language, canon formation, and the history of criticism.This contribution to the ongoing debate over early twentieth-century culture presents modernism as an interracial, cross-cultural project, arguing for a new appreciation of the central role black culture played within it. Writers and artists whose works are discussed include Marianne Moore, Charles Chesnutt, Jean Toomer, Wallace Stevens, James A. Bland, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Gertrude Stein, Bert Williams, Zora Neale Hurston, Samuel Beckett, W. C. Handy, Hart Crane, and Clement Greenberg.

This is the most exciting work on the development of literary and artistic modernism in the United States that I have read in a long time. Unlike many other scholars who see African American modernism as either distinct from or on the margins of 'high modernism,' Jacques takes a leaf from Mary Helen Washington's famous question about American Studies and investigates what happens when we put African American expressive culture at the center of modernism.... The breadth of the author's interdisciplinary knowledge is stunning.... Much of this study is groundbreaking. - James Smethurst, author of The Black Arts Movement: Literary Nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s in cross-disciplinary studies these days, and so this book should appeal to a wider-than-usual spectrum of readers both inside and outside the academy."" - Aldon L. Nielsen, author of Black Chant: Languages of African-American Postmodernism

ISBN: 9781558496880

Dimensions: 223mm x 149mm x 17mm

Weight: 308g

240 pages