Modernism and the Ordinary

Modernism and the Ordinary

by Liesl Olson (Author)

Synopsis

Modernism and the Ordinary overturns conventional accounts of the modernist period as primarily drawn toward the new, the transcendent, and the extraordinary. Liesl Olson shows how modernist writers were preoccupied, instead, with the unselfconscious actions of everyday life, even in times of political crisis and war. Experiences like walking to work, eating a sandwich, or mending a dress were often resistant to shock, and these daily activities presented a counter-force to the aesthetic of heightened affect with which the period is often associated. With attentive readings, Modernism and the Ordinary examines works by Joyce, Woolf, Stein, Stevens, Proust, Beckett, and Auden alongside the ideas of philosophers such as Henri Bergson and William James. With attentive and sensitive readings, Modernism and the Ordinary examines works by Joyce, Woolf, Stein, Stevens, Proust, Beckett, and Auden alongside the ideas of philosophers such as Henri Bergson and William James. In doing so, the book reveals the non-transformative power of the ordinary as one of modernism's most compelling attributes: day-to-day experience comes to stand not as an impediment to the creative life, but as a satisfaction with the material rather than the spiritual, the local rather than the exotic, the constant rather than the unknown, and the democratic rather than the privileged. The book intervenes in new debates about object theory, daily life, and the accurate definition of literary modernism.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 216
Edition: First Edition. Hardback. Dust Jacket.
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 23 Apr 2009

ISBN 10: 0195368126
ISBN 13: 9780195368123

Media Reviews
Modernism and the Ordinary is exceptionally well-written, elegantly organized, and compelling in its argument that critical accounts of literary modernism have failed to recognize in the major works of that period the centrality of ordinary experience and everyday life. * Rebecca Walkowitz, Rutgers University *
In this masterful study, Liesl Olson shows that modernist writers' attention to the everyday entailed a complex struggle to retain the ordinariness of the ordinary-to resist literary representation's drift toward the epiphanic, the momentous, the teleological. Olson's clear-eyed, elegant readings recast in wonderfully unexpected ways twentieth-century art's relation to the mundane life that furnished its most vital, yet most exacting, material. * Douglas Mao, Johns Hopkins University *
Author Bio
Liesl Olson teaches at the University of Chicago where she is a Harper-Schmidt Fellow and Assistant Professor in the Humanities Division. In addition to her book Modernism and the Ordinary, she has published essays on the work of Henry James, W.H. Auden, and the contemporary poet Robert Hass.