Ghostwriting Modernism
Ghostwriting Modernism
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Author(s): Sword, Helen
ISBN No.: 9780801487750
Pages: 232
Year: 200201
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 60.77
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Ghostwriting Modernism is a well-researched and intelligent book that works in the best tradition of cultural studies--deftly exploring the interpenetration of highbrow modernism and popular spiritualism. - Sean Latham (James Joyce Literary Supplement) Ghostwriting Modernism focuses upon the history and implications of spiritualism--whether embraced or disdained--in the writings of Yeats, Joyce, Eliot, H.D., progressing chronologically to the Ouija board soundings deciphered into poems by Sylvia Plath, Ted Hughes, and James Merrill. Sword points out that modernist narratives of other worlds reveal the cultural and ideological concerns of the living. Contemporary perceptions are haunted by everything that has come before. Reading this knowledgeable book, I begin to wonder what liminal world might be swirling through. - Charlotte Mandel (English Literature in Transition) Helen Sword's short book is a dense and engrossing account of rarely pursued writings.


Ghostwriting Modernism is a book that grows on you, not just because of its original documentation and its systematic appraisal of an often neglected topic, but also because of its skillful progression and elegant construction. - Jean-Michel Rabate, University of Pennsylvania (Modernism/modernity) Sword begins her survey in the nineteenth century, tracing the fluctuating status of popular spiritualism as it was alternately satirized by male writers and celebrated by popular female authors. The book is. successful in the detailed sections that outline the parallel developments and intersections of spiritualism and modernist writing. Although in 'Tradition and the Individual Talent' Eliot writes that his famous formulation of modernist poetics will 'halt at the frontier of. mysticism' in exploring the way that writers often did not halt at this frontier, Sword offers a valuable account of the literary results of their efforts to open the coffin lids of the famous dead. - Stephen J. Burn, Northern Michigan University (James Joyce Quarterly) Sword offers a convincing demonstration of the ubiquitous influence of spiritualist practice.


Of particular interest is the chapter on 'spirit writing'--that is, books written by mediums who claim to be channeling the words of the deceased. Its extensive bibliography, copious notes, and fine insights make it a recommended volume for academic readers at all levels. (Choice) Sword's excellent book is a model of sensible lucidity. - William J. Maxwell, University of Illinois (American Literature).


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