

An edition of Apocalypse and after (1995)
modern strategy and postmodern tactics in Pound, Williams, and Zukofsky
By Bruce Comens
Publish Date
1995
Publisher
University of Alabama Press
Language
eng
Pages
218
Description:
Apocalypse and After examines the development of Modernism into Postmodernism through the works of three major American poets. Modernism's struggle to develop a new global strategy was to a great extent a response to the catastrophe of World War I, while the Postmodern resort to fragmentary tactics stems from Modernist strategy's implications in World War II and the atomic bomb. The final chapter adumbrates the emergence of a paramodernism characteristic of our own time. The book is innovative in its many readings of specific poems and in its larger assessments of the poets' careers, while the method of analysis it develops is particularly noteworthy for its ability to relate nuances of formal innovation to the writers' diverse political contexts and programs.
subjects: Literature and history, Postmodernism (Literature), History and criticism, Criticism and interpretation, American Experimental poetry, Modernism (Literature), American poetry, Experimental poetry, American, Apocalyptic literature, History, Modernisme (cultuur), Postmodernisme, Williams, william carlos, 1883-1963, Zukofsky, louis, 1904-1978, Pound, ezra, 1885-1972, Postmodernism
People: Ezra Pound (1885-1972), Louis Zukofsky (1904-1978), William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)
Places: United States
Times: 20th century