
Counter-revolution of the Word: The Conservative Attack on Modern Poetry, 1945-1960
Author(s): Alan Filreis (Author)
- Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
- Publication Date: 30 Mar. 2008
- Edition: New
- Language: English
- Print length: 448 pages
- ISBN-10: 080783162X
- ISBN-13: 9780807831625
Book Description
This title presets poetry’s cold war. During the Cold War an unlikely coalition of poets, editors, and politicians converged in an attempt to discredit – if not destroy – the American modernist avant-garde. Ideologically diverse yet willing to bespeak their hatred of modern poetry through the rhetoric of anticommunism, these “”anticommunist antimodernists;”” as Alan Filreis dubs them, joined associations such as the League for Sanity in Poetry to decry the modernist “”conspiracy”” against form and language. In “”Counter-revolution of the Word””, Filreis narrates the story of this movement and assesses its effect on American poetry and poetics.Although the antimodernists expressed their disapproval through ideological language, their hatred of experimental poetry was ultimately not political but aesthetic, Filreis argues. By analyzing correspondence, decoding pseudonyms, drawing new connections through the archives, and conducting interviews, Filreis shows that an informal network of antimodernists was effective in suppressing or distorting the postwar careers of many poets whose work had appeared regularly in the 1930s. Filreis’ analysis provides new insight into why experimental poetry has aroused such fear and alarm among American conservatives.
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About the Author
ALAN FILREIS is Kelly Professor of English, faculty director of the Kelly Writers House, and director of the Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing at the University of Pennsylvania. He is author of three other books, including Modernism from Right to Left: Wallace Stevens, the Thirties, and Literary Radicalism.
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