In "The Yeats Brothers"," "Calvin Bedient delivers a brilliant
exploration of modernism through the mutual illumination provided
by Ireland's greatest poet and greatest painter. By examining the
poems of the one and the paintings of the other, he recovers an
often overlooked quality both artists embraced in their work--that
core feature of modernism, a thoroughgoing preoccupation with
motion and fluidity, that terrifying encounter with the universe
conceptualized as force.Bedient's is the first book to treat W. B.
Yeats and Jack Yeats as twin geniuses in the detection and
representation of chaos. William Butler Yeats's love and fear of
motion pervade every aspect of his poetry, helping to determine his
themes, riddle his images, and shape the cadences of his verse.
Jack Yeats's focus on change and motion caused him to engage with
the cross-currents of his time, not--as sometimes thought--to
remain locked in the past. Through daring and nuanced readings of
the poems and analyses of the paintings, Bedient reveals the two
artists to have been complicit with modernism--against homogeneity,
alert to divisions, polyphony, and restlessness in things and in
ourselves. Adept in close discussion of poetic and painterly style,
and magisterial in his grasp of theorists from Adorno through
Zizek, Bedient provides us with genuinely new interpretations of
the Yeats brothers' work, and with a more sophisticated
understanding of modernism. "There are dozens of books on W. B.
Yeats, and some on his brother Jack, but no one has put the two
together before. Calvin Bedient does so very adroitly, without
conflating their respective achievements. Bedient argues
brilliantly that these two very different artists reveal a
meaningful shortcoming in our customary understanding of modernism;
by showing that both were fascinated by movement, or mobility--the
diverse processes of change--Bedient pulls the poet toward the
painter to show these two artists in sympathy with the thought of
their time. An important revisionary argument about the meaning of
modernism, Bedient's work also exhibits a lively, candid critic
explaining the work of the Yeats brothers in readings that
constantly repay attention. No one could have a better companion
while reading W. B. Yeats' poems, or viewing Jack Yeats'
paintings." --Robert von Hallberg, University of Chicago "Welcome
to the 'terrible novelty of light.' Fearless, virtuosic,
turbulence-charged, "The Yeats Brothers and Modernism's Love of
Motion"is a ravishing triumph. Plunging with nonetheless meticulous
yet rippling (and yes, muscled) analytic brilliance and
sensuousness through the poems and paintings of W.B. and Jack
Yeats, Bedient gives us one of the most profound, emulatively
thrilling, stylish, and wide-awake celebrations of poetry, of
painting, and of Modernism itself, one could hope to read. No one
has better caught--or rather transmitted--so much of the towering
"and" torrential genius of the Yeats brothers, seen here in a
rushing storm of cultural, political, aesthetic, and daemonic
forces. The unstaunched motive, and emotive, force of Bedient's
book takes us directly into the tragic yet joyful--indeed
exultant--leap of poem after poem, canvas after canvas, all of them
luminous, endlessly reconstitutive and volatile elements of what
remains, in these gorgeous pages, the 'bursting dawn' of their
Movement, still redolent as it is with the 'storm-scattered
intricacy' of night." --Peter Sacks, Harvard University "This is a
captivating and theoretically sophisticated study of what Calvin
Bedient identifies as mobility in the Modernist poems and paintings
of the two Yeats brothers. Jack Yeats, the painter, has been
curiously neglected by the art world outside Ireland; Bedient here
reclaims his work as the worthy visual counterpart to the lyric
poems of Jack's famous brother William Butler Yeats, a poet who
relentlessly interrogated the regimes of representation as they
were given to him at the turn of the twentieth century. Both poet
and painter devised art constructs that come to terms with the
restlessness, the uncertainty, and the stark divisions of
Modernism. Like Bedient's earlier critical studies, """The Yeats
Brothers"is startlingly original." --Marjorie Perloff, author of
"Wittgenstein's Ladder" and "Twenty-First Century Modernism"
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