Quotation and modern American poetry

Eliot, Williams and Moore

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Quotation and modern American poetry
Elizabeth Gregory
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December 15, 2009 | History

Quotation and modern American poetry

Eliot, Williams and Moore

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Why did quotation come into vogue among modernist American poets when, historically, allusion had been the preferred mode of intertextual reference? Elizabeth Gregory argues that quotation served as a site of these poets' struggle with questions of literary authority and, relatedly, of cultural and gender identity.

While different poets quoted very different kinds of texts to very different effects, their shared reliance on quotation suggests their commonality of concerns - concerns that remain of interest in the postmodernist world, where quotation has become the prevalent artistic method.

Gregory reads the efflorescence of poetic quotation as part of an attempt to redefine the sources of authority in the modernist world, in which traditional hierarchies of all kinds seemed to be disintegrating. For Americans and for women this breakdown offered an opportunity, since they had long occupied a secondary position in the reigning cultural and gender orders. But it was an opportunity with a cost, and not all poets welcomed it.

Through close readings of T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land, William Carlos William's Paterson, and a selection of the poetry of Marianne Moore, the author explores the spectrum of modernist response to these issues and the ways in which each poet used quotation to establish a very different position of authority for him or herself. Eliot employs quotation to reassert old hierarchies and, by denying his Americanness, to claim a place of authority within them.

Moore, oppositely, employs quotation as a means of questioning hierarchy and of laying claim to a kind of anti-authoritative authority for herself. Williams takes an insistently ambivalent position toward authority, represented most clearly in his schizophrenic attitudes toward gender.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
258

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Cover of: Quotation and modern American poetry
Quotation and modern American poetry: imaginary gardens with real toads
1996, Rice University Press
in English - 1st ed.
Cover of: Quotation and modern American poetry

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Edition Notes

Thesis (Ph. D.)--Yale University, 1989

Includes bibliographical references (p. 245-258)

Photocopy. Ann Arbor, Mich. : University Microfilms International, 1992. 22 cm

The Physical Object

Pagination
v, 258 p
Number of pages
258

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Open Library
OL17927700M

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December 15, 2009 Edited by WorkBot link works
October 7, 2008 Created by ImportBot Imported from Miami University of Ohio MARC record