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New World Modernisms: T.S. Eliot, Derek Walcott, and Kamau Brathwaite (New World Studies) [Paperback]

Charles W. Pollard (Author)

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Book Description

October 11, 2004 New World Studies

James Clifford tells us that modernism has become a "traveling culture" because it reflects the "discrepant cosmopolitanism" of the twentieth century -- that is, a world in which people are paradoxically migratory yet rooted, international yet local. Perhaps modernism has traveled so well because it has been transformed by its journey; this is the suggestion Charles Pollard makes in New World Modernisms, a fascinating first step in mapping the migration of modernism.

Pollard looks to recent Caribbean poetry as a means of reassessing modernism's cosmopolitanism; in particular, his book redefines the cosmopolitan influence of T. S. Eliot's modernism by examining how his ideas have been transformed by the two leading Anglophone Caribbean poets, Derek Walcott and Kamau Brathwaite. Pollard concentrates on three of Eliot's modernist principles: tradition, poetry's relation to speech, and poetry's social function. He then traces Walcott and Brathwaite's transformations of these ideas in their use of diverse cultural fragments to construct alternative Caribbean traditions, in their revitalization of poetic language with the rhythms and diction of Caribbean speech, and in their rearticulation of the poet's public role in a Caribbean context.

By examining these formative postcolonial expressions of modernism, Pollard challenges the prevailing critical approach that sets postcolonialism in opposition to modernism, an approach that assumes that a modernist aesthetic necessarily advances a colonial ideology.

New World Modernisms reinvigorates Eliot scholarship by tracing his international influence while providing the most comprehensive evaluation to date of the complementary contributions of Walcott and Brathwaite to the development of a New World modernist aesthetic.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

New World Modernisms makes a contribution that is both substantial and significant to scholarship in two spheres: Anglophone Caribbean literature in the larger context of postcolonial theory, and modernism...A stimulating and provocative book.

(Laurence Breiner, Professor of English, Boston University, author of An Introduction to West Indian Poetry )

About the Author

Charles W. Pollard, formerly Assistant Professor of English at Calvin College, is President of John Brown University.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE BOOK form of the Southern Review's anniversary issue on T. S. Eliot features a picture of Eliot standing cautiously on the rail of a cruise ship as it comes into port in Hamilton, Bermuda, in January 1959 (Olney 8). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
complementary poetics, postcolonial poetry, discrepant cosmopolitanism, cosmopolitan modernism, cultural wholeness, creative ambivalence, familiar compound ghost, public poet, cultural decolonization, poetic revolution, nation language, modernist poetics, linguistic fragmentation, anthropological imagination, mythical method, poetic exchange, postcolonial writers, cultural home, imperial language, poetic strategies, folk experience
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Barabajan Poems, West Indian, The Waste Land, Little Gidding, Saint Lucia, History of the Voice, Sweeney Agonistes, The Dust, French Creole, Mother Poem, Brother Man, Derek Walcott, Complete Poems, West Indies, Arkansas Testament, Caribbean Discourse, Four Quartets, Letter Sycorax, Black Sycorax, East Indian, Edouard Glissant, Edward Brathwaite, English Creole, Old World, Rei Terada
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