Reading Machines in the Modernist Transatlantic provides a new account of aesthetic and technological innovation, from the Machine Age to the Information Age.
Digital Humanities and Modernist Literature Shawna Ross, James O'Sullivan ... Modernism, and New Media (2016), co-edited with Vanessa Lent and Bart Vautour, and Translocated Modernisms: Paris and Other Lost Generations (2016), ...
By focusing on the collaborative networks that sprang up within and between these publications, the book delves into correspondence, unpublished manuscripts, and unfinished projects to explore frequently overlooked points of contact between ...
This is an essential resource for those interested in print and book history, the politics and culture of the expatriate avant-garde and the reading machine's impact on reading, writing and literacy.
William Carlos Williams, A Voyage to Pagany (New York: New Directions, 1970 [1928]). 114. Peter Nicholls, 'A Homemade World? America, Europe, and Objectivist Poetry', in The Idea and the Thing in Modernist American Poetry, ed.
... Anthropologists and the Rediscovery of America , 1886-1965 ( Cambridge : Cambridge University Press , 2010 ) , 4 . 15 Susman , Culture as History , 153 . 16 Susman , Culture as History , 156-7 . 17 18 Bendix , In Search of Authenticity ...
... Reading Machines in the Modernist Transatlantic . Avant - Gardes , Technology and the Everyday ( Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press , 2022 ) . 6. Die Deutsche Bibliothek et al . , eds . Internationale Bibliographie zur ...
Building on recent work on Victorian print culture and the turn toward material historical research in modernist studies, this collection extends the frontiers of scholarship on the 'Atlantic scene' of publishing, exploring new ways of ...
I was still hanging on to the outermost edge of the literary game as fiction editor of Pearson's Magazine ( in which I printed Carl Sandburg's first poems after they had been turned down by the Masses , of which I was a contributing ...
Thus the interview reveals that the true marvel here is not the uncanny phenomenon in itself, but that which produces the ... which becomes machinic in and through its production of the spectacle of the uncanny as a marketable good.
By reading these works in the context of information systems, Stephens shows how the poetry of the past century has had, as a primary focus, the role of data in human life.