Fancy's Craft: Art and Identity in the Early Works of Djuna Barnes, and: Henry Miller: Full of Life. A Memoir of America's Uninhibited Literary Genius (review)

1987 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 668-670
Author(s):  
Michael J. Hoffman
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Daniela Caselli

This chapter traces a history of Dante’s reception in anglophone literature between the 1870s and the 1950s. It acknowledges his importance in Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, and James Joyce, but engages more closely with Samuel Beckett, Djuna Barnes, and Virginia Woolf. It shows that the modernist Dante that emerges from these authors’ work is both a formal and political one: recruited as an anti-authoritarian voice from the past and seen anew from feminist and queer perspectives, this is not a twenty-first century Dante forced against his will to virtue-signal, however; on the contrary, this is a Dante anachronistically familiar with key ‘vices’ of twentieth-century authors, readers and commentators. Focusing on sullenness, resistance, and fatigue, the chapter argues for a new understanding of modernist experiments with Dante’s political and formal complexity that refuse to use him as a ‘code or a weapon […] to crush someone’, as Dorothy Richardson put it.


Chimères ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 24
Author(s):  
Lucie Bryant
Keyword(s):  

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