Re/discoveries

February 9, 2016 By: The Editors

A forum for short reviews of republished modernist literature, works in translation, and more.

March 6, 2025 By: Debra Rae Cohen

If literary radio studies, in its first couple of decades, anointed a hero, it was probably Hilda Matheson. The first Head of Talks at the BBC, not only an accomplished bureaucrat but a practical theorist who developed the style of “intimate address” by which the broadcaster artificially produced the impression of naturalness, Matheson was a perfect candidate for celebration: lover of Vita Sackville-West, booster of literary broadcasting, martyr (or so the story goes) to the patriarchy, as represented by Director-General Sir John Reith,

May 12, 2023 By: Ian Afflerbach

In 1932, Tess Slesinger published her most famous story, “Missis Flinders,” a bracingly candid look into the mind of a woman in New York City returning home from her abortion. Slesinger’s story—inspired by her own decision to terminate her pregnancy that year—does not fit neatly into the rhetoric that surrounds our ongoing political and legal debate over women’s reproductive rights. During the Great Depression, economic scarcity meant that abortion, if still illegal, was not policed or stigmatized as bitterly as it would be in earlier or later decades. Neither simply “pro” nor “anti,” Slesinger’s tale instead explores the psychological afterlives of this experience for one woman, trying to reconcile her decision with the feelings that linger after, with her identity as an intellectual, and with her husband’s own intellectual insecurities.

April 20, 2023 By: Ria Banerjee

The bad side of books, Lawrence says, is “the beastly marketable chunk of published volume,” the “miserable tome” as an object, “the actual paper and rag volume of any of my works,” “a bone which every dog presumes to pick with me” that “delivers me to the vulgar mercies of the world.”

December 21, 2022 By: Hannah Voss

H.D.’s HERmione opens with a meditation on the past, courtesy of her daughter, Perdita Schaffner. In H.D.-like prose, Schaffner reprimands herself: “Don’t delve and dredge. Cut down on nostalgia, that too can be insidious.”

August 9, 2022 By: Benjamin Kahan

Alice Mitchell’s 1892 murder of her lover Freda Ward rocked their well-to-do Memphis community and scandalized the nation. The masculine Mitchell slashed Ward’s throat in broad daylight when Ward decided not to marry Mitchell. Lisa Duggan has provided the richest account of the murder to date and has exhaustively detailed the way that it was sensationalized in the period press as “a Very Unnatural Crime,” representing “a new narrative-in-formation—a cultural marker of the emergence of a partially cross-gender-identified lesbian.”

August 2, 2022 By: Lisa Tyler

In 1927, a disapproving Edith Wharton presciently pronounced Harry Crosby “a sort of half-crazy cad.” Ernest Hemingway, who spent the summer of 1927 in Pamplona with Crosby, once told Archibald MacLeish, “Harry has a great, great gift. He has a wonderful gift of carelessness” (Wolff, Black Sun, 171). Crosby is a liminal figure hovering in the background of modernist literature—a now largely forgotten poet whose work inspired MacLeish and an aesthetically sophisticated publisher whose Black Sun Press published Hart Crane’s epic poem The Bridge, Short Stories by Kay Boyle, and the first excerpts of James Joyce’s Work-in-Progress to appear in book form. Ben Mazer’s Selected Poems by Harry Crosby brings Crosby’s poetry out of the background of literary modernism and into the foreground for our examination.

June 13, 2022 By: Carey Snyder

For many interwar writers, the women’s suffrage movement was a force as powerful as the war itself in shaping modernity. In her undeservedly forgotten novel The Call (1924) , Edith Ayrton Zangwill takes up the history of both suffrage militancy and the war, chronicling their impact on women’s professional, political, and personal lives. The novel tells the story of a young chemist, Ursula Winfield, who is initially more absorbed in questions of science than in questions of women’s rights. She...

May 13, 2022 By: Elizabeth F. Evans

H. G. Wells may be most famous in modernist studies for Virginia Woolf’s suggestion that he doesn’t belong among the “moderns.” Yet Wells was vitally engaged with the features, futures, and controversies of early twentieth-century life, as his varied oeuvre makes clear. If his science fiction has kept Wells a household name, it is in his social romances that we see him at his most perceptive as an observer of modern everyday life. Socialists and suffragettes are among the characters of Ann Veronica: A Modern Romance (1909), a novel that grapples with roles for women in a time of rapid social change. Previously out of print in the US, and with no scholarly edition available anywhere, Ann Veronica was overdue for rediscovery. Carey J. Snyder’s edition of the novel provides an incisive introduction, illuminating notes, and judiciously chosen contemporary documents that enable readers to appreciate Wells’s contributions to the debates of his age and to our own.

January 18, 2022 By: Chris Roulston

In 2020, Penguin Classics reissued Dorothy Strachey’s Olivia (1949), which tells the story of a sixteen-year-old girl from London sent to a French boarding school on the outskirts of Paris, Les Avons, where she falls passionately in love with one of her teachers, Mlle Julie. Olivia is an exceptional narrative in terms of its content, its composition, and its publication history. Strachey (1865-1960) was part of the prominent Strachey family, whose father played a key role in the development of the British Empire in India as a military engineer. Dorothy’s five siblings included Lytton Strachey, author of Eminent Victorians (1918); James Strachey, translator of Freud’s English Standard Edition; Pernel Strachey, who became principal of Newnham College, Cambridge; Pippa Strachey, who became Secretary of the London Society of Women’s Suffrage; and Marjorie Strachey, a writer and French teacher. Dorothy, not to be outdone, became the official English translator of the eminent French author, André Gide.

October 21, 2021 By: Amanda Golden

When it comes to writers’ lives, what remains is fragmentary and incomplete. In her 1963 novel The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath’s protagonist Esther Greenwood refers to such remnants as “the tatty wreckage of my life.” The image of Plath in popular culture is linked to her poetry, but often emphasizes her suicide. Red Comet addresses these assumptions as it sheds new light on Plath’s cultural moment and relevance today. Any biography must confront the fact of an incomplete archive.

September 30, 2021

Spoiler alert. Just before Stan Emery, the tragic embodiment of youthful excess in John Dos Passos’ glittering Manhattan Transfer, dies in an apartment fire, he looks out onto the cityscape of Manhattan and says, “Kerist I wish I was a skyscraper!” (255). For each reader of the novel, the line will stand out. It hits the eye, a solitary line after a set of song lyrics and before a paragraph break.

August 20, 2019 By: Ian Whittington

If “expansion” has been the watchword of the past two decades of modernist studies, as Rebecca Walkowitz and Douglas Mao have it, we could be excused for identifying Peter Kalliney’s Commonwealth of Letters: British Literary Culture and the Emergence of Postcolonial Aesthetics (2013) as a signal instance of this trend. [1] The operating principle of Kalliney’s monograph is one of extension: of the geographic edges of modernist cultural production; of the chronological boundaries of the movement; of the range of cultural forms that might be brought under scholarly scrutiny; and of the forms of attention that might be applied to systems of literary influence, promotion, distribution, and debate. Post-Bourdieusian, institutionally-focused, closely-read, globally-minded, belatedly-modernist: the approach signaled by Commonwealth of Letters appears at once invigorating and emblematic of recent shifts in the field. Not yet seven years old, this volume already seems ripe for a forum on “Re/discoveries” not only because it captures the energies of its expansive scholarly moment, but because it has already had a considerable impact on multiple branches of the literary-critical tree. Count my own sub-field of radio studies among those branches that felt the shake: Kalliney’s 2007 article in PMLA, “Metropolitan Modernism and its West Indian Interlocutors: 1950s London and the Emergence of Postcolonial Literature” (which laid out some of the key arguments of Commonwealth of Letters and forms the core of its fourth chapter) has quickly become a touchstone for scholars working at the intersections of media and global anglophone literature, as evidenced by a surge of recent work in the field by Julie Cyzewski, Daniel Ryan Morse, James Procter, Leonie Thomas, myself, and many others.

April 11, 2019 By: Maggie Gordon Froehlich

Zelda Fitzgerald’s Save Me the Waltz has gone in and out of print since it was first published by Charles Scribner’s & Sons in 1932. It was brought back in 1967 by Southern Illinois Press, and it appeared later in the Collected Writings of Zelda Fitzgerald, edited by Matthew Bruccoli and with an introduction by Mary Gordon, from University of Alabama Press in 1991. Handheld Press’s reprint comes at just the right time, following a great flourishing of works—from biographies to a streaming...

March 24, 2017 By: Stuart Christie

However much we may agree or disagree with the modernist English literary critic, William Empson—or, at times, even scratch our heads at him—it is generally accepted that he was a marvel. He possessed a decidedly unbridled critical talent, one that emerged fully only once the globalization of modernist literary production and art intersected with a corresponding epistemological demand: th

October 18, 2016 By: Josh Epstein

Is listening the constitutive act of modernity? It seems so. Thanks to a flood of scholarship on aural culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century—Emily Thompson's The Soundscape of Modernity (2002) , Jonathan Sterne's The Audible Past (2003), and a 2011 special issue of American Quarterly (edited by Kara Keeling and Josh Kun) being just three examples—the act of listening has worked its way into the texture of cultural studies generally and modernist studies specifically.
From the Print Journal

Poetics of Dance: Body, Image, and Space in the Historical Avant-Gardes by Gabriele Brandstetter

January 2, 2017 By: Michelle Clayton

Volume 1 Cycle 4

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Poetics of Dance: Body, Image, and Space in the Historical Avant-Gardes. Gabriele Brandstetter. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015. Pp. 456. $99.00 (cloth); $39.95 (paper).

Finally appearing in English translation twenty years after its first appearance in German, Gabriele Brandstetter’s Poetics of Dance: Body, Image, and Space in the Historical Avant-Gardes retains its groundbreaking force.[1] This partly has to do with the book’s extraordinary range: taking the English, French, German, and Italian-speaking territories of Western Europe from the 1890s through the 1930s as her terrain, spotlighting the presence and prominence of dancers not only on stage but in salons, museums, tourist sites, and textual spaces, Brandstetter walks us through the changes in both dance practice and in thinking about dance in the period of the historical avant-gardes. Insisting throughout on the enmeshment of dance with experiments in the literary, visual, and theatrical arts, she presents dance not only as a muse for other media—a potential pitfall for cross-disciplinary analysis—but as a vehicle and indeed forerunner for the most radical reconceptualizations of the relation between body and space, body and mind, body and language, and body and community at the beginning of the twentieth century. What results is a durable model of interdisciplinary inquiry: as Brandstetter structures her exploration of dance developments around a series of galvanizing encounters between dancers, writers, artists, and scenographers, her analyses invite reflection on the ongoing entanglements of the arts, on the ways in which experiment develops at their frictional junctures. This book is at once a praxis and a provocation: a revelation of the role of disciplinary dialogues in the generation of artistic innovations, and a reminder of the need for continuing cross-disciplinary ventures in criticism today.

Poetics of Dance springs into action through the interplay between literature, dance, and the visual arts. The book contains riveting readings of scenes of dance in prose and poetry from a host of different languages and locations: from the globe-trotting, history-spanning stories of Greek-Irish Japanophile Lafcadio Hearn, through spectacular scenes of seduction in a novel by the ardent Italian nationalist Gabriele d’Annunzio, to the French shawl-poems of the German-speaking Rainer Maria Rilke. Yet Brandstetter is not primarily concerned with representations of dance in literature—terrain recently mined expertly by Susan Jones—nor in the visual arts—currently being explored by Nell Andrew and Juliet Bellow.[2] Rather, she delves into interactions between the practitioners of these various arts, showing the ways in which they learned from one another’s disciplines through kinaesthetic encounters, and through practices of active, dialogical translation. What emerges is a pulsating panorama of the arts in conversation, redistributing their reach, their forms, and their matters.

What interests Brandstetter are the ways in which an international cast of characters, working in collaboration or in isolation, used a common repertoire of figures to negotiate an epistemological shift occasioned by a semiotic crisis at the turn of the century, and did so primarily through encounters with dancing bodies (oftentimes their own). The number of dancers who appear in the book’s pages is itself noteworthy: from the pioneering Loie Fuller, Isadora Duncan, Ruth St. Denis, Vaslav Nijinsky, Mary Wigman, and Rudolf Laban, through a host of momentarily significant figures such as Maud Allan, Ida Rubinstein, Stasia Napierkowska, Mata Hari, and Ruby Ginner, to isolated performers still requiring full attention, such as Valentine de Saint Point, the single-named Akarova, Dore Hoyer, Alexander Sakharoff, Gret Palucca, and Valeska Gert. A second circle of characters consists of artists working at the intersection of two or more art forms and engaging with dance through their own practices: the visual artists Wassily Kandinsky, Sonia Delaunay, and Sophie Taeuber-Arp, or the theatrical reformers Edward Gordon Craig, Oskar Schlemmer, and Vsevolod Meyerhold, not to mention the ubiquitous Serge Diaghilev. Rounding out the scene are the writers and aesthetic theorists reflecting upon dance across the century’s divide, from Gustav Flaubert, Stéphane Mallarmé, and Paul Valéry in France, through Alfred Symons, Oscar Wilde, and Hearn in the Anglophone context, to Friedrich Nietzsche, Rilke, and Hugo von Hofmannsthal in the German-speaking arena, looping repeatedly through d’Annunzio, Filippo Tommasso Marinetti, and the Bragaglia brothers in the Italian. As this (incomplete) roster suggests, when one begins to put dance into the modernist picture, it catalyzes an unsuspected number of connections across languages, across art forms, across spaces and times.

But what is it about dance that allows it to make these connections, and that earned it a central role in the reorganization of the arts in the first decades of the century? In Brandstetter’s lucid account, modern dance emerged at the juncture of a newly activist historicism and new projections of the contemporary, and it provided the images, not to mention the practices, that undergirded each one. In the book’s two sections, Brandstetter maps out dance’s critical elaboration of two distinct concepts: “pathos formulae” (derived from Aby Warburg’s exploration of gesture-repertoires across cultures and times), examples of ways of connecting via the body to a moment, to a past, or to a community; and “topos formulae,” examples of how to move through spaces while cutting a figure of one’s own. As Brandstetter demonstrates, the birthplace of modern dance was not so much the stage as the museum, where the pioneers of modern dance presented themselves as mediators between past, present, and a potential future, promising to animate and articulate the fragmented figures around them. Prime practitioners of this mediating function, modeling a relation to civilizations distant in time and space through gesture, were Duncan, in her performances and research practices in the British Museum and the Louvre; St. Denis, on her imagined tours of the far east; and Fuller, in the theater she designed for her performance at the 1900 World’s Fair, a space for archiving her own works as much as presenting them, making it a museum as much as a stage. And indeed this intertwining of function is crucial to the shift in dance’s place in modernity, as Brandstetter outlines. Installing dance in the museum was not simply a matter of finding new representational content for the art form; it was also a way of presenting dance as a new epistemology. Modern dancers quickly began to produce lectures and press materials to accompany their performances, which were soon moving fluidly between galleries, salons in private homes, cafés and theaters, and tourist locales of the east and west, reframing a journey to specific sites (e.g. Duncan in Greece) as a journey into the past, performed for a present-tense public. As Brandstetter lucidly demonstrates, the modern dancer was a prime agent of cultural and conceptual mobility, drawing upon the techniques of her moment to offer examples of how to move between constraint and chaos, order and ecstasy, the individual and the collective, private and public.

Not only agent, of course, but also image. Brandstetter carefully unspools the relation between subjecthood and objecthood, dancer and spectator, uninterrogated exoticism and self-aware eroticism, in her reading of dancers reading and being read. She pays particular attention to specific dances shared across repertoires of “ethnic” dancers in the early decades of the century, leading to a tangent on the use of costume that turns into a large-scale meditation on fabric: the clothes that drape the moving body, that connect it to transhistorical “pathos formulae,” that serve as malleable material for the performer while also holding the attention of the spectator—all the while serving as potential inscriptive surface, as in the Fortuny shawls with their Knossos motif that braided images of the past into the fashion of modernity. Indeed there are moments when fabric becomes the unifying thread of the book or of the period, the tissue binding together the arts, or permitting connections to be drawn between them; as visual artists begin to play with moving fabric, and theatrical designers experiment with ways of framing, concealing, and revealing the body, writers take fabric as the very stuff of metamorphosis, as a material analog to dance. (Sonia Delaunay’s “robe-poems” epitomize this syncretic impulse channeled into costume.)

The focus on fabric is only one example of the kind of comparative work that Poetics of Dance performs around figures shared across the arts. As the book maps responses to common sources across a range of media and national horizons—such as the contemporaneous, contradictory uses of the Nike of Samothrace in Italian Futurism, Russian Cubo-Futurism, or Duncan’s Marseillaise dance—it forges paths to be followed by scholars interested in either cross-cultural or cross-disciplinary comparison. And as it helps us to see a cultural horizon anew, it also alerts us to figures that have fallen out of view. The figure that looms largest for this particular reader is the Austrian Hugo von Hofmannsthal, prescient and eloquent witness to his epoch, whose unpublished draft for an article on dancers declares, “we will no longer tolerate a message that is less complicated than a whole being.” In Hofmannsthal’s words, “[w]e want to read all the hieroglyphs” (82). For the interested reader, this book abounds in them.


Notes

[1] Originally published as Tanz-Lektüren: Körperbilder und Raumfiguren der Avantgarde (Frankfurt am Main: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, 1995).

[2] Susan Jones, Literature, Modernism, and Dance (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013); Juliet Bellow and Nell Andrew, “Inventing Abstraction? Modernist Dance in Europe,” in The Modernist World, Stephen Ross and Allana C. Lindgren, eds. (Oxford: Routledge, 2015), 329–38.