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Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > From 1900
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Camera Works - Photography and the Twentieth-Century Word (Paperback)
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Camera Works - Photography and the Twentieth-Century Word (Paperback)
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"Camera Works is about the impact of photography and film on modern
art and literature. For many artists and writers, these new media
offered hope of new means of representation, neither linguistic nor
pictorial, but hovering in a kind of utopian space between. At the
same time, the new media introduced a dramatic element of novelty
into the age-old evidence of the senses. For the avant-garde, the
challenges of the new media were the modern in its most
concentrated form, but even for aesthetically unadventurous writers
they constituted an element of modern experience that could hardly
be ignored.
Camera Works thus traces some of the more utopian projects of
transatlantic avant-garde, including the Readie machine of Bob
Brown, which was to turn stories and poems into strips of
linguistic film. The influence of photography and film on the
avant-garde is traced from the early days of Camera Work, through
the enthusiasm of Eugene Jolas and the contributors to his magazine
transition, to the crisis created by the introduction of sound in
the late 1920's.
Subseguent chapters describe the entirely new kind of sensory
enjoyment brought into modern American fiction by the new media.
What Fitzgerald calls "spectroscopic gayety," the enjoyable
diorientation of the senses by machine perception, turns out to be
a powerful force in much American fiction. The revolutionary
possibilities of this new spectatorship and its limitations are
pursued through a number of examples, including Dos Passos, James
Weldon Johnson, and Hemingway. Together, these chapters offer a new
and substantially different account of the relationship between
modern American literature and the mediatized society of theearly
twentieth century.
With a comprehensive introduction and detailed particular
readings, Camera Works substantiates a new understanding of the
formal and historical bases of modernism. It argues that when
modern literature and art respond to modernity, on a formal level,
they are responding to the intervention of technology in the
transmission of meaning, an intervention that unsettles all the
terms in the essential relationship of human consciousness to the
world of phenomena.
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