This is a critical and historical interpretation of 'Oriental' influences on American modernist poetry. Kern equates Fenollosa and Pound's 'discovery' of Chinese writing with the American pursuit of a natural language for poetry, what Emerson had termed the 'language of nature'. This language of nature is here shown to be a mythic conception continuous with the Renaissance idea of the language of Adam - a language lacking any difference between what it is and what it means. Through analysing and contextualising the nineteenth-century works of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Ernest Fenollosa and the twentieth-century creations of Ezra Pound and Gary Snyder, Kern sheds light on the three contemporary nexuses of his search: the cultural study of Orientalism and the West, the evolution of Indo-European linguistic theory, and the intellectual tradition of American modernist poetry.
ISBN: | 9780521105552 |
Publication date: | 19th March 2009 |
Author: | Robert Boston College, Massachusetts Kern |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 336 pages |
Series: | Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture |
Genres: |
Literary studies: poetry and poets |