Manifestoes: Provocations of the Modern

Manifestoes: Provocations of the Modern

by JanetLyon (Author)

Synopsis

For more than three hundred years, manifestoes have defined the aims of radical groups, individuals, and parties while galvanizing revolutionary movements. As Janet Lyon shows, the manifesto is both a signal genre of political modernity and one of the defining forms of aesthetic modernism. Ranging from the pamphlet wars of seventeenth-century England to dyke and ACT-UP manifestoes of the 1990s, her extraordinarily accomplished book offers the first extended treatment of this influential form of discourse. Lyon demonstrates that the manifesto, usually perceived as the very model of rhetorical transparency, is in fact a complex, ideologically inflected genre-one that has helped to shape modern consciousness. Lyon explores the development of the genre during periods of profound historical crisis. The French Revolution generated broadsides that became templates for the texts of Chartism, the Commune, and late-nineteenth-century anarchism, while in the twentieth century the historical avant-garde embraced a revolutionary discourse that sought in the manifesto's polarizing polemics a means for disaggregating and publicizing radical artistic movements. More recently, in the manifestoes of the 1960s, the wretched of the earth called for either the full realization or the final rejection of the idea of the universal subject, paving the way for contemporary contestations of identity among second- and third-wave feminists and queer activists.

$60.41

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 230
Edition: 1st ed
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 29 Apr 1999

ISBN 10: 0801485916
ISBN 13: 9780801485916

Media Reviews
Lyon offers an innovative, far-ranging study. . . A complex, lucid, and nuanced study of the manifesto as the signature genre of aesthetic and political militancy, this volume will be indispensible to all college and university collections. -Choice
This book is suggestive in its argument and expansive in its topics. . . Recommended for all readers who are interested in the history of political modernism. -Virginia Quarterly Review. Winter, 2000.
Brilliantly nuanced and historically rich. . . Janet Lyon's acute weaving of modernist history, manifestic dissent, avant-garde aesthetics, and feminist struggle is gracefully learned, supple, and exciting. We are left with an entirely fresh sense of the extent to which the public spheres of modernity permitted their linguistic and political freedoms. -Ian F.A. Bell, University of Keele. Yearbook of English Studies, 31, 2001
This book provides compelling histories and analysis for scholars of media and social movements to mine for inspiration. -Catherine Squires, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Journal of Communication, March 2001
A major, ground-breaking work of scholarship regarding the centrality of the manifesto to the political and aesthetic contradictions of modernity. From its opening pages, the book reveals itself as a lucid, confident and carefully argued piece of work, written with real elegance and elan. Lyon succeeds admirably in showing the connections between issues that have often been treated in isolation, such as revolutionary rhetoric, aesthetic theory, feminism, and the public sphere. -Rita Felski, University of Virginia
This is a wonderful book. Anyone interested in revolutions-aesthetic, political, sexual-and the way they are represented by their most ardent proponents will want to read Janet Lyon's Manifestoes. -Stephen Watt, Indiana University
Janet Lyon's genre study of manifestoes and modernity has an impressively ambitious reach-from the Diggers and Levellers to the feminist SCUM and cyborgianism. She posits telling conjunctures between aesthetics and politics, avant-gardism and feminism, in such historical moments as Republican France, literary modernism, and second-wave feminism. The result is a fresh, new reading of manifestoes as a revolutionary form of discourse interwoven with the history of feminism and inseparable from the formation of the modern subject in the West. -Susan Stanford Friedman, University of Wisconsin-Madison