In the half-century between 1890 and 1950, a variety of fields
and disciplines, from musicology and literary studies to biology,
psychology, genetics, and eugenics, expressed a profound interest
in the subject of rhythm. In this book, Michael Golston recovers
much of the work done in this area and situates it in the society,
politics, and culture of the Modernist period. He then filters
selected Modernist poems through this archive to demonstrate that
innovations in prosody, form, and subject matter are based on a
largely forgotten ideology of rhythm and that beneath Modernist
prosody is a science and an accompanying technology.
In his analysis, Golston first examines psychological and
physiological experiments that purportedly proved that races
responded differently to rhythmic stimuli. He then demonstrates how
poets like Ezra Pound, W. B. Yeats, Mina Loy, and William Carlos
Williams either absorbed or echoed the information in these
studies, using it to hone the innovative edge of Modernist practice
and fundamentally alter the way poetry was written.
Golston performs close readings of canonical texts such as
Pound's "Cantos," Yeats's "Lake Isle of Innisfree," and William
Carlos Williams's "Paterson," and examines the role the sciences of
rhythm played in racist discourses and fascist political thinking
in the years leading up to World War II. Recovering obscure texts
written in France, Germany, England, and America, Golston argues
that "Rhythmics" was instrumental in generating an international
modern art and should become a major consideration in our reading
of reactionary avant-garde poetry.
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