Abstract
As a student of American Literature with a preference for
contemporary cultures and for the Twentieth Century in general,
I have found the investigation of modernity and its relation with
modernism and postmodernism inescapable. I have read across
literary disciplines and outside the literary domain several accounts
of modernity and of the many modernisms modernity generates,
each indebted to the specific disciplinary tradition from which
it originates, and each exploring the complex problematics of
modernity from a different vantage point. I have learned a lot.
But I have never found systematic studies focused primarily on
exploring and explaining the relation between modernity as a
condition of knowledge and modernism and postmodernism as
categories of literary history. What generally seems to be widely
assumed is some continuity binding the terms of this triumvirate
in some necessary relation which, however, is generally left
unexplained and unexplored. It is from the desire to try out viable
and satisfactory missing links that I started considering the set
of questions addressed by this book. This book can therefore be
described as a sort of inception, a first chapter of what I imagine
may become a tome of reflections on modernity, modernism, and
postmodernism. It is all but conclusive. To the contrary, I see it
as a fragment, a reflection on few aspects of a much larger cluster
of phenomena and discourses, and – as such – I can only describe it as tentative, debatable, revisable: an humble attempt at joining from the side of literary studies the philosophical and literary ends of aesthetics and epistemology as they emerge from the immensely inaugurates.
Lingua originale | Inglese |
---|---|
Editore | Mercurio |
Numero di pagine | 104 |
Volume | 1 |
ISBN (stampa) | 9788895522470 |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 1 gen 2009 |
Keywords
- Faulkner
- Late Modernism
- Literature
- Philosophy of the Subject
- modernism
- postmodernism