"In American Silences," Joseph Anthony Ward offers a unique
analysis of the use and effects of silence in modern American
realistic art. Beginning with the nineteenth-century literature
that laid the foundation for silence in art, he moves to a brief
analysis of Sherwood Anderson's "Winesburg, Ohio" and Ernest
Hemingway's "In Our Time," showing how they, along with several
other crucial works of twentieth-century American realism,
incorporate the power of the silent into their expression without
sacrificing the subjects and techniques of traditional realism.
Examining "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men," James Agee's
commentary on the life of tenant farmers, documented with
photographs by Walker Evans, Ward traces the book's pattern of
""silence, then silence disturbed by sound, and ultimately silence
restored."" Ward further supports his theory with a study of Agee's
"A Death in the Family and Evans' American Photographs." Ward sees
Agee's admiration of photography as a connection between the
silence of the scenes he writes about and the silence of Evans'
photographs. The use of silence is perhaps even more obvious in the
paintings of Edward Hopper. Although throughout the book Ward
suggests both the positive and negative qualities of silence in
art, Hopper's paintings provide little in the way of
postiveness.
For Ward, the art of silence is an art of extreme concentration
that seeks essences rather than superficiality that nearly
transcends realism itself. The theme of silence in American realism
is a significant new one, but Ward's interpretation of the prose
and his analysis of the photographs and paintings, many of which
are reproduced in this book, establish validity for art as the
voice of silence.
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