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Blasphemous Modernism: The 20th-Century Word Made Flesh

Posted By: IrGens
Blasphemous Modernism: The 20th-Century Word Made Flesh

Blasphemous Modernism: The 20th-Century Word Made Flesh (Modernist Literature and Culture) by Steve Pinkerton
English | March 31, 2017 | ISBN: 0190627565, 0197523250 | True EPUB/PDF | 200 pages | 1.6/8.4 MB

Theorizes how blasphemy works as a form of literary expression.
Studies a diverse range of modernist poets and novelists, including women writers, queer writers, and writers of color.
Argues that God is not "dead" for modernist writers and instead persists-somewhat perversely-by serving as a vital and potent object of profanation.

Scholars have long described modernism as "heretical" or "iconoclastic" in its assaults on secular traditions of form, genre, and decorum. Yet critics have paid surprisingly little attention to the related category of blasphemy–the rhetoric of religious offense–and to the specific ways this rhetoric operates in, and as, literary modernism. United by a shared commitment to "the word made flesh," writers such as James Joyce, Mina Loy, Richard Bruce Nugent, and Djuna Barnes made blasphemy a key component of their modernist practice, profaning the very scriptures and sacraments that fueled their art. In doing so they belied T. S. Eliot's verdict that the forces of secularization had rendered blasphemy obsolete in an increasingly godless century ("a world in which blasphemy is impossible"); their poems and fictions reveal how forcefully religion endured as a cultural force after the Death of God. More, their transgressions spotlight a politics of religion that has seldom engaged the attention of modernist studies. Blasphemy respects no division of church and state, and neither do the writers who wield it to profane all manner of coercive dogmas–including ecclesiastical as well as more worldly ideologies of race, class, nation, empire, gender, and sexuality. The late-century example of Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses affords, finally, a demonstration of how modernism persists in postwar anglophone literature and of the critical role blasphemy plays in that persistence. Blasphemous Modernism thus resonates with the broader cultural and ideological concerns that in recent years have enriched the scope of modernist scholarship.