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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Rainer RumoldPublisher: Northwestern University Press Imprint: Northwestern University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.60cm Weight: 0.492kg ISBN: 9780810131125ISBN 10: 0810131129 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 30 June 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsRecommended. --<i>CHOICE</i> Recommended. --CHOICE Recommended. CHOICE Recommended. --CHOICE Rumold's encyclopedic knowledge of European modernism allows him to draw connections among a diverse group of thinkers and creative figures, who are seldom treated together within a single study... on the whole, his book is a thought-provoking review of the German historical avant-garde. --Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies This fascinating and wide-ranging book makes an eloquent argument for reconsidering the German avant-garde in around 1900-40. The avant-garde under discussion here comprises artists, writers and thinkers from Kokoschka to Benjamin who cut across conventional categorizations such as Expressionism, Dada, Surrealism or 'theory.' Rumold's 'archaeological' aim is to uncover the German avant-garde's turns towards the visual, its desire for a pure imagery free from literary representation, the burden of history and Western conceptualizations of the self. According to Rumold, the avant-garde's visual turns subvert the culture of metaphor perpetuated and institutionalized by literature, displacing symbolic representations of the Western subject into a range of pre-logical and progressive forms, figures, and 'unsymbolizable, singular images.' Rumold maps a rich repertoire of avant-garde 'image zones' (the term is Walter Benjamin's, from his 1929 essay on Surrealism), paying close attention to their historical and theoretical contexts as well as their shared modality which, he suggests, amounts to an interplay of materiality and mental creativity to give us 'the sight, touch, feel, not of utopia, but of a ground unspoiled by hypertrophic conceptuality and metaphors.' The book thus bears out the author's claim to the productivity of thinking about the avant-garde's visual turns, where previous accounts have emphasized its artistic and/or political failure. --Journal of European Studies Author InformationRainer Rumold is Professor Emeritus of German Literature and Critical Thought at Northwestern University, USA. His previous books include Eugene Jolas’s autobiography, Man from Babel (1988), which he edited with Andreas Kramer; The Janus Face of the German Avant-Garde: From Expressionism toward Postmodernism (Northwestern, 2001); and, coedited with Klaus H. Kiefer, Eugene Jolas: Critical Writings, 1924–1951 (Northwestern, 2009). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |