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Check here for updates about our latest issues, calls for papers, submission guidelines and tips, as well special online-only content. Our issues themselves are available at Project Muse and are archived on JSTOR . Check out the "Read for Free" page to enjoy some featured content.



More than four decades after its founding, the Journal of Modern Literature remains a leading scholarly journal in the field of modern and contemporary literature and is widely recognized as such. It emphasizes scholarly studies of literature in all languages, as well as related arts and cultural artifacts, from 1900 to the present. International in its scope, its contributors include scholars from Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceana, and South America.

Showing posts with label T.S. Eliot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label T.S. Eliot. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

NEW ISSUE! JML 48.2 (Winter 2025) is now LIVE

 


Journal of Modern Literature issue 48.2 (Winter 2025), on the theme "Matter, Meaning, Material" is now LIVE on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/54502


Content includes:

Enrico Bruno

Athleticism, Accommodation, and the Labor Question in Ellison’s “Afternoon” 


Grzegorz Kosc 

From Coinage Metallurgy to Fiat Money: Robert Lowell’s Poetic Evolution 


Sean Collins

Marianne Moore and the Environmental “Octopus” of Modernist Collage


Jeffrey Careyva

“The Mind and the Poem Are All Apiece”: William Carlos Williams and the Dysfluent Poetics of Aphasia 

FREE!


Frances Wear

To Worship Burning Art: T.S. Eliot’s “Little Gidding” as the Organon of F.W.J. von Schelling’s System of Transcendental Idealism


Enaiê Mairê Azambuja

The Tao of the Non-human: Ineffability, Materiality, and Ecosemiotics in Marianne Moore’s Assemblage Poetics


Bowen Wang

Vital Modernism: E.E. Cummings’s Still Life, the Quotidian, and Visceral Poetics 


Ryan Kerr

Anarchism and Misery in Austerity Britain: Alan Sillitoe, Samuel Selvon, and the Origins of Neoliberalism 


Reviews

Emily James and Ellie Lange

The Material Lives and Afterlives of World War I

 

Chen Lin

Giving Voice to the Hidden Muse: A Review of Lyndall Gordon’s The Hyacinth Girl 


Orchid Tierney

“The Age of Plasticene”: A Review of Ranjan Ghosh’s The Plastic Turn 


Cole Adams

Poetry After Criticism, Criticism After Poetry: A Review of The Academic Avant-Garde


Ramón E. Soto-Crespo

A New Realism for Perilous Times

Friday, January 12, 2024

NEW ISSUE: JML 47.1 "Inheritances and Intertexts" is now LIVE!



 Journal of Modern Literature issue 47.1 (Fall 2023), on the theme "Inheritances and Intertexts" is now live on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/51953


Content includes:

Aakanksha J. Virkar

Max Klinger’s Beethoven (1902), Nietzsche’s Übermensch, and the Anti-fascist Poetics of T.S. Eliot’s Coriolan I “Triumphal March” (1931) 


Matthew Thompson

Mobilizing Great War Literature: Rereading the English Canon through Mulk Raj Anand’s Across the Black Waters


Courtney Ferriter

Inheriting the Language of Stein: The Pragmatist Poetics of Harryette Mullen


Paula Vene Smith

Day Today: Circadian Rhythms and the Sense of Unending in Poetic Diaries by Gertrude Stein and Harryette Mullen


Erin Yanota

E.E. Cummings’s Shakespeare and the Modernist Middlebrow Sonnet


Dan Sperrin

The Augustan Plath: “Gulliver” and Other Poems


Sam Walker

“[S]ongs of allusion”: Sterling Brown, Harryette Mullen, and the Roots of Poetic Recycling

FREE


Jason Ciaccio

Modernity’s Waking Dreams: Walter Benjamin, Carl Jung, and the Illuminations of Twilight States


Brian Brennan

“Yes, these are the dog days, Fortunatus”: W.H. Auden and the Latin Poet Venantius Fortunatus


Reviews 

Catherine Enwright

David Jones’s Medieval Voices: A Review of Poet of the Medieval Modern by Francesca Brooks


Layne M. Farmen

Gazing into the Eclipse: A Review of The Evolutions of Modernist Epic


Yingjie M. Cheng

“Possible, Possible, Possible”: Katherine Mansfield Studies in the Twenty-first Century


Burt Kimmelman

The New American Poetry, Personism, and the Cold War


Daniel T. O’Hara

The Gospel According to Lazarus

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Book News: Affinities of affect in Lear, Eliot, and Smith

Rhythms of Feeling in Edward Lear, T. S. Eliot, and Stevie Smith

BY JASMINE JAGGER



Oxford UP, 2022

ISBN: 9780198868804

https://global.oup.com/academic/product/rhythms-of-feeling-in-edward-lear-t-s-eliot-and-stevie-smith-9780198868804


Rich with unpublished material and detailed insight, Rhythms of Feeling offers a new reading of three of the most celebrated poets: Edward Lear, T.S. Eliot, and Stevie Smith. Tracing exciting lines of interplay, affinity, and influence between these writers for the first time, the book shifts the terms of critical debate on Lear, Eliot, and Smith and subtly reorients the traditional account of the genealogies of literary modernism. 

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

Going beyond a biographically-framed close reading or a more general analysis framed by affect theory, the volume traces these poets' "affective rhythms" (fits, tears, nerves) to consider the way that poetics, the mental and physical process of writing and reading, and the ebbs and flows of their emotional weather might be in dialogue. Attentive, acute, and often forensic, the book broadens its reach to contemporary writers and medical accounts of creativity and cognition. Alongside deep critical study, this volume seeks to bring emotional intelligence to criticism, finding ways of speaking lucidly and humanely about emotional and physical states that defy lucidity and stretch our sense of the human.

  • Studies affect and emotion in the poetry of Edward Lear, T.S. Eliot, and Stevie Smith
  • Presents an innovative new reading of poetic form
  • Uses previously neglected archival materials to cast new light on each writer
  • Combines analysis of textual and visual form to draw exciting new parallels between lines written and drawn by the poetic imagination

Jasmine Jagger is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Roehampton. She has published articles in Victorian Poetry, Romanticism, Literary Imagination, The Cambridge Quarterly, Apollo, and The Carrollian.

Monday, October 17, 2022

JML 45.4 (Summer 2022) "The Matter of Poetry" is LIVE!



JML 45.4 (Summer 2022) on the theme "The Matter of Poetry" is now available on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/48858.

Content includes:


Modernist renegotiations 

Espen Grønlie

Linguistic Relativism and Poetry: Ezra Pound’s Reading of Lucien Lévy-Bruhl as a Key to Ernest Fenollosa’s The Chinese Written Character as a Medium for Poetry


Tiao Wang and Ronald Schleifer

Ezra Pound and Mang Ke (芒克): Image, Affect, and Consumerism in Western and Chinese Modernism


Joseph Pizza

“All Aboard for Natchez, Cairo, and St. Louis”: Minstrelsy and Conversion in T.S. Eliot’s Ash-Wednesday


Nathaniel Mills

John Berryman’s Blackface Jokes: The Insights of Literary Failure 


Harold Schweizer

On Gentleness: Rilke’s Hands


Tradition, lamentation, and individual talent

Wit Pietrzak

“Her songs are raised like fists”: The Caoineadh Tradition in Paul Muldoon’s Lamentations 


Dalia Bolotnikov Mazur

Charles Reznikoff's Testimony of the Dead


Stefania Heim

“I for i and i for I”: Susan Howe’s That This and the Relational Self 

FREE


Marty Cain

Frank Stanford’s Rural Avant-Garde: Infrastructure, Mediation, and Poetic Community


Nate Mickelson

Composing in the Future Particular: Reading CAConrad’s (Soma)tics


Review

Stefania Heim

The Matter of Poetry 


Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Eliot's "things that cling": A Closer Look at JML 45.3

 


Take a closer look at JML 45.3. Author Rachel Murray shares how Eliot's gripping crustaceans help us understand attachment in his writing in THIS POST for the Indiana University Press blog

Her essay, “Things That Cling: Marine Attachment in Eliot” is now available for FREE on Project Muse.

Monday, July 25, 2022

JML 45.3 (Spring 2022) is LIVE!

JML 45.3 (Spring 2022) on the theme "New Materialisms" is now live on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/48204

 

Content includes:


Jennifer Yusin

Editorial Changes

FREE!


Marit Grøtta

Showing Seeing: The Study of Faces and Portrait Photographs in Virginia Woolf’s Early Novels 


Rachel Murray

Things that Cling: Marine Attachments in Eliot 

FREE!


Emma Felin

Faith and Fabrication in To the Lighthouse: Virginia Woolf’s Table-Cloth(s)


Olga Zolotareva

The Image Responds: Photographic Aura in Aleksandr Ivanov’s “Stereoscope” 


Matt Prout

Art or Shit: Value, Sincerity, and the Avant-garde in David Foster Wallace 


Zackary Vernon

Faulkner’s Charismatic Megaflora: Critical Plant Studies and the US South


Quan Zhou and Qiping Liu

Agentic Things and Traumatized People in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye


Aaron McCullough

Sheaths, Molds, and Shards: The Formation of an Anthropological Aesthetics in Willa Cather’s The Song of the Lark


Alyson Brickey

“Fragments of cloth, bits of cotton, lumps of earth”: Object-Oriented Lists in Let Us Now Praise Famous Men 


James Draney

W.G. Sebald’s Paper Universe: Austerlitz and the Poetics of Media Obsolescence 


Reviews

Zachary Kinsella

Becoming Bewildered


Tim Clarke

Modernist Women’s Writing and the Gift of Literature 


Karina Jakubowicz

From Waste Lands to Farmhands: T.S. Eliot and the Organic Husbandry Movement 


Jeffrey Careyva

The Evanescence of Lyric: A Review of John Wilkinson’s Lyric in Its Times: Temporalities in Verse, Breath, and Stone

 

Wednesday, June 8, 2022

Book News: Literary modernism and the environment

Eco-Modernism: Ecology, Environment and Nature in Literary Modernism

EDITED BY JEREMY DIAPER



Clemson UP, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-949-97985-5

https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/books/id/54594/


This volume of critical essays provides the first major guide to ecology, environment and nature in literary modernism. It explores the environmental turn and green consciousness in modernist criticism and broadens the boundaries and scope of current ecocritical enquiry. In drawing together contributions from leading and emerging scholars from across the UK and America, Eco-Modernism offers a diverse range of environmental and ecological interpretations of modernist texts and illustrates that ecocriticism can offer fresh and provocative ways of understanding literary modernism. In the rapidly burgeoning field of environmental studies, it will serve as a vital touchstone for scholars and students alike to explore the major areas and crucial themes in ecocritical modernism.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.


CONTENTS

“Ecocriticism and Modernism”
    Jeremy Diaper
       
        “Modernism and the Rural Novel”
          Dominic Head

              “Edith Sitwell: Modernist Experimentation and the Revitalisation of Nature Poetry”
                Elizabeth Black
                   
                    “‘No poetic phantasy / but a biological reality’: The Ecological Visions of H.D.’s Trilogy”
                      Elizabeth O’Connor
                         
                          “‘Has it begun to sprout?’: The Ecological Life of Modernist Corpses”
                            Julia E. Daniel

                                “Marianne Moore’s Ecopoetics”
                                  Sharla Hutchinson
                                     
                                      “Modernism’s Insect Sense”
                                        Rachel Murray

                                            “Eco-consciousness and Eco-poetics in Modernist Writing”
                                              Fiona Becket
                                                 
                                                  “‘The Parched Eviscerate Soil’: Environmental Thought in Eliot’s Poetry and Prose”
                                                    Jeremy Diaper
                                                       
                                                        “The Law of Hoes and Rakes”: Wallace Stevens’s Agrarian Poetics
                                                          Jasmine McCrory
                                                             
                                                              “‘Grain by grain’: Beckett’s Agripessimism and the Anthropocene”
                                                                Caitlin McIntyre
                                                                   
                                                                    “‘There All The Time Without You’: Modernism and the Anthropocene”
                                                                      Peter Adkins


                                                                      Jeremy Diaper has published numerous articles and chapters on T.S. Eliot's agrarianism and the history of the organic husbandry movement. His essays have appeared in Agricultural History, Agricultural History Review, the Journal of the T.S. Eliot Society UK, T.S. Eliot Studies Annual and Literature & History. He recently edited a special issue of Modernist Cultures on "Modernism and the Environment." 

                                                                      Monday, April 11, 2022

                                                                      JML 45.2 (Winter 2022) is LIVE!


                                                                      JML 45.2 (Winter 2022) on the theme "Reclaiming Tradition and Contingency" is now live on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/47651.


                                                                      Contents

                                                                      Charlotte Fox 

                                                                      “Reclaiming” tradition: An exploration of literary influence in Helen Macdonald’s H Is for Hawk 


                                                                      K. Joudry

                                                                      The Gospel According to Bolo 


                                                                      Emily Anderson

                                                                      An “unseemly joke”: Service-author Stories and Wyndham Lewis’s Blasting and Bombardiering (1937)


                                                                      Rachel Gaubinger 

                                                                      The “Voiceless Language” of Sisters: Queer Possibility in E.M. Forster’s Howards End 

                                                                      FREE


                                                                      Niklas Cyril Fischer 

                                                                      E.M. Forster, Realism, and the Style of Progressive Nostalgia


                                                                      Gurumurthy Neelakantan 

                                                                      Philip Roth’s Politics of Freedom in the American Trilogy 


                                                                      Caroline Gelmi 

                                                                      Vachel Lindsay and the Primitive Singing of the New Poetry


                                                                      André Furlani

                                                                      Walking toward Genre: The Pedestrian Excursus


                                                                      Jack Quirk 

                                                                      The Potentiality of Paralysis in Joyce’s “Counterparts” 


                                                                      John Attridge

                                                                      Contingent Sociality and Same-sex Desire in À la Recherche du Temps Perdu 


                                                                      Reviews

                                                                      Jake O’Leary

                                                                      Politics and Literature in Interwar Britain’s Only Women-Controlled Weekly Review


                                                                      Robert Harris

                                                                      Making Him New: Ezra Pound in the Twenty-First Century


                                                                      Chen Lin

                                                                      The “wholeness” of T.S. Eliot: A Review of T. S. Eliot’s Dialectical Imagination


                                                                      Thursday, March 17, 2022

                                                                      Book News: Enriching our understanding of literary empathy

                                                                      Modernist Empathy: Geography, Elegy, and the Uncanny

                                                                      BY EVE C. SORUM



                                                                      Cambridge UP, 2019

                                                                      ISBN: 9781108595667

                                                                      https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/modernist-empathy/83F710997D411394B54BD1912C59A983


                                                                      This book shows how reading modernist literature gives us a fresh and necessary insight into both the tensions within the empathetic imagination and the idea of empathy itself. Writers such as Thomas Hardy, Ford Madox Ford, Mary Borden, T. S. Eliot, and Virginia Woolf encourage us to enter other perspectives even as they question the boundaries between self and other and, hence, the very possibility of empathy. Eve Sorum maintains that we must think through this complex literary heritage, focusing on the geographic and elegiac modes of the empathetic imagination, and revealing empathy as more fraught, threatening, and even uncanny than it first appears. Modernist Empathy thereby forges a theory of literary empathy as an act not of orientation, but of disorientation, thereby enriching our contemporary understanding of both modernist literature and the concept of literary empathy. 

                                                                      BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

                                                                      Eve Sorum is associate professor of English at the University of Massachusetts, Boston and was a Fulbright Scholar in Burkina Faso in 2013–14. She has published articles and essays on a range of topics, including the masochistic aesthetics of T. S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf, poetic self-elegies, and the democratic nostalgia of W. H. Auden.

                                                                      Wednesday, February 23, 2022

                                                                      Book News: The satiric mentality at work in modernist writing

                                                                      Satiric Modernism

                                                                      BY KEVIN RULO



                                                                      Clemson University Press, 2021

                                                                      ISBNs: 978-1-949-97989-3 Hardback, 9781949979909 Ebook

                                                                      https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/books/id/54544/

                                                                      BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

                                                                      In this book, Kevin Rulo reveals the crucial linkages between satire and modernism. He shows how satire enables modernist authors to evaluate modernity critically and to explore their ambivalence about the modern. Through provocative new readings of familiar texts and the introduction of largely unknown works, Satiric Modernism exposes a larger satiric mentality at work in well-known authors like T.S. Eliot, James Joyce, Wyndham Lewis, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, and Ralph Ellison and in less studied figures like G.S. Street, the Sitwells, J.J. Adams, and Herbert Read, as well as in the literature of migration of Sam Selvon and John Agard, in the films of Paolo Sorrentino, and in the drama of Sarah Kane. In so doing, Rulo remaps the last hundred years as an era marked distinctively by a new kind of satiric critique of and aesthetic engagement with the temporal fissures, logics, and regimes of modernity. This ambitious, expansive study reshapes our understanding of modernist literary history and will be of interest to scholars of twentieth century and contemporary literature as well as of satire.


                                                                      'Kevin Rulo’s Satiric Modernism is an intellectually capacious rethinking of the relationships among literary (and ultimately filmic and theatrical) modernism, postmodernism, and satire. Rulo posits that one can find satire’s traces in a variety of modernist manifestations—hidden, as it were, in plain sight. The book contains startlingly original readings, unexpected critical juxtapositions, and creative treatments of the affiliations between modernist texts and texts that both look backward and forward from them. Satiric Modernism will be consulted with keen interest by scholars both of modernist studies and of the history and theory of satire.'

                                                                      Scott W. Klein, Wake Forest University


                                                                      'In this powerful, capacious, deeply researched book, Kevin Rulo teaches us that to be modern is also to be dismayed about being modern and to express that dismay in the form of satire: satirical modes of analysis and expression are foundational to modernism in all of its various phases and incarnations. Lucid and convincing, Satiric Modernism offers us bracing, revisionary understandings of each author and every text that falls under Rulo’s inquiry, even—especially—those authors with whom we are familiar, as well as those beyond the boundaries conventional to studies of the field. Not afraid to explore even the darkest aspects of these satirists’ worlds, demonstrating how each writer also turns the scalpel on their own failings, Rulo shows how these artists clear a way to make it new, building magnificently on excoriated ground.'

                                                                      John Whittier-Ferguson, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor


                                                                      Kevin Rulo is a clinical assistant professor in the English Department at the Catholic University of America. He has published in The Review of English Studies, Neohelicon, and The T.S. Eliot Studies Annual.

                                                                      Wednesday, July 14, 2021

                                                                      JML 44.3 (Spring 2021) is LIVE!

                                                                       


                                                                      JML 44.3 (Spring 2021) is now available. Find it on JSTOR at https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jmodelite.44.issue-3 and on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/45120


                                                                      From modernist impasses to our post-literary moment

                                                                      Mi Jeong Lee

                                                                      The Ugly Politics of (Im)passivity, or Why Conrad’s Anarchists are Fat


                                                                      Laurel Harris

                                                                      Impassagenwerk: Jean Rhys’s Interwar Fiction and the Modernist Impasse

                                                                      FREE!


                                                                      Elysia Balavage

                                                                      Illumination, Transformation, and Nihilism: T. S. Eliot’s Empty Spaces


                                                                      Alexandra Edwards 

                                                                      Orlando: A Fanfiction; or, Virginia Woolf in the Archive of Our Own


                                                                      Louis Armand

                                                                      “He Proves by Algebra”: James Joyce’s Post-Literary Incest Machines


                                                                      Infinities of the post-

                                                                      Arleen Ionescu 

                                                                      Blanchot in Infinite Conversation(s) with Beckett 


                                                                      Jeffrey Peer 

                                                                      Hot Spinsters: Revisiting Barbara Pym’s Virtuous Style


                                                                      Farah Ali

                                                                      Freedom as a Mirage: Sexual Commodification in Harold Pinter’s Films


                                                                      Renée Tursi

                                                                      Searching Pragmatism in Marilynne Robinson 


                                                                      Marija Grech

                                                                      Re-Visions of the End: Christine Brooke-Rose and the Post-Literary 

                                                                      FREE!


                                                                      Reviews

                                                                      Jonathan Culler

                                                                      Intertexts of Intertextuality 


                                                                      Robert Savino Oventile

                                                                      Transports, Earthbound


                                                                      Omri Moses

                                                                      Technological Paranoia: A Review of Andrew Gaedtke’s Modernism and the Machinery of Madness


                                                                      James Martell

                                                                      Logic of Missed Encounters: A Review of Arka Chattopadhyay’s Beckett, Lacan, and the Mathematical Writing of the Real 


                                                                      Ruben Borg

                                                                      Beckett’s Insistent Bodies


                                                                      Susan Mooney

                                                                      The Insider’s View of Beckett’s Re-Generating Art


                                                                      Thursday, January 7, 2021

                                                                      JML 44.1 (Fall 2020) is LIVE!

                                                                       

                                                                      JML 44.1 (Fall 2020) on the theme "Genealogies and Historiographies" is now live on JSTOR at https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jmodelite.44.issue-1 and on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/43684

                                                                      Contents include:

                                                                      Genealogies of the Modern

                                                                      Michael Bedsole

                                                                      Exteriority and Interiority in T.S. Eliot’s Graduate Work  


                                                                      Ignasi Ribó 

                                                                      “At the farthest pole from man”: Kafka’s Posthuman Outlook on War 


                                                                      John S. Bak

                                                                      Tennessee Williams’s “Homage to Ophelia (A Pretentious Foreword)” with Commentary


                                                                      Joseph Darlington

                                                                      Anthony Burgess and William S. Burroughs: Shared Enemies, Opposed Friends


                                                                      Kevin McGuirk

                                                                      “[T]he apple an apple”: Ammons, Bloom, and “the ten thousand things” – with Emerson and Lao Tzu 


                                                                      Dream Historiographies

                                                                      Clare Udras Ellis

                                                                      Pursued by Time: The Chronolibidinal Aesthetics of Katherine Mansfield 


                                                                      Annaliese Hoehling

                                                                      Seeing History in the Baroque Ruins of Elizabeth Bowen’s The Last September: An Indictment of Cosmopolitan Modernity


                                                                      Liran Razinsky

                                                                      Psychoanalysis and Autobiography: Leiris, Freud and the Obstacle to Self-Knowledge 


                                                                      Jesse Zuba

                                                                      Raymond Carver and the Modern Career Imaginary


                                                                      Bram Mertens

                                                                      Dread, Desire and Destruction: The Historical Sublime in Erwin Mortier’s Marcel (1999) 


                                                                      Reviews

                                                                      Elizabeth Scheer

                                                                      Surveying the Damage: Marina MacKay’s Modernism, War, and Violence


                                                                      Robert L. Caserio

                                                                      Audacious Reconciliation


                                                                      Farisa Khalid

                                                                      Good, Brave Causes: British Fiction of the 1950s