Skip to main content Site map

Literature, Modernism, and Dance


Literature, Modernism, and Dance

Hardback by Jones, Susan (Fellow and Tutor, St Hilda's College, Oxford)

Literature, Modernism, and Dance

£110.00

ISBN:
9780199565320
Publication Date:
1 Aug 2013
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
358 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 10 - 15 May 2024
Literature, Modernism, and Dance

Description

This book explores the complex relationship between literature and dance in the era of modernism. During this period an unprecedented dialogue between the two art forms took place, based on a common aesthetics initiated by contemporary discussions of the body and gender, language, formal experimentation, primitivism, anthropology, and modern technologies such as photography, film, and mechanisation. The book traces the origins of this relationship to the philosophical antecedents of modernism in the nineteenth century and examines experimentation in both art forms. The book investigates dance's impact on the modernists' critique of language and shows the importance to writers of choreographic innovations by dancers of the fin de siècle, of the Ballets Russes, and of European and American experimentalists in non-balletic forms of modern dance. A reciprocal relationship occurs with choreographic use of literary text. Dance and literature meet at this time at the site of formal experiments in narrative, drama, and poetics, and their relationship contributes to common aesthetic modes such as symbolism, primitivism, expressionism, and constructivism. Focussing on the first half of the twentieth century, the book locates these transactions in a transatlantic field, giving weight to both European and American contexts and illustrating the importance of dance as a conduit of modernist preoccupations in Europe and the US through patterns of influence and exchange. Chapters explore the close interrelationships of writers and choreographers of this period including Mallarmé, Nietzsche, Yeats, Conrad, Woolf, Lawrence, Pound, Eliot, and Beckett, Fuller, Duncan, Fokine, Nijinsky, Massine, Nijinska, Balanchine, Tudor, Laban, Wigman, Graham, and Humphrey, and recover radical experiments by neglected writers and choreographers from David Garnett and Esther Forbes to Andrée Howard and Oskar Schlemmer.

Contents

Introduction ; A Poetics of Potentiality: Mallarme, Fuller, Yeats, Humphrey, and Graham ; Nietzsche, Modernism, and Dance: Dionysian or Apollonian? ; From Dance to Movement: Eurhythmics, Expressionism, Language, and Literature ; Diaghilev and British Writing ; Two Modern Classics: The Rite of Spring and Les Noces ; The 'unheard rhythms' of Virginia Woolf ; 'Savage and superb': Primitivism in Text and Dance ; Massine, Modernisms, and the Integrated Arts ; Ezra Pound on Kinaesthetics, the Russian Ballet, and Machines ; 'At the still point': T. S. Eliot, Dance, and a Transatlantic Poetics ; Rambert and Dramatic Dance ; Samuel Beckett and Choreography ; Afterword ; Bibliography

Back

University of Sunderland logo