Envisioning Metropolis—New York as Seen, Imaged and Imagined

The essay first sketches the geography of literary New York from the Bowery and the Lower East Side to Harlem; then fills out the geographic space with chapters of New York’s literary history from modernism and its myth of metropolis (in Dos Passos, Joseph Stella and Hart Crane) to the collapse of t...

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Main Author: Heinz ICKSTADT
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2010-03-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/1069
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author Heinz ICKSTADT
author_facet Heinz ICKSTADT
author_sort Heinz ICKSTADT
collection DOAJ
description The essay first sketches the geography of literary New York from the Bowery and the Lower East Side to Harlem; then fills out the geographic space with chapters of New York’s literary history from modernism and its myth of metropolis (in Dos Passos, Joseph Stella and Hart Crane) to the collapse of this vision of an urban sublime during the Great Depression. It subsequently discusses more playful versions of the urban in Pop Art and literary texts of the 1970s and 1980s, before it turns to contemporary fiction where the modernist tradition of an urban sublime is deconstructed and metropolitan space reconceived as part of a larger transnational system of information, global money flows and migratory movements. In novels of Don DeLillo, Cristina García, Kiran Desai and Colson Whitehead, the city is seen as a space of abstract interconnectedness as well as of alienation at its social and economic margins; as a culturally conflicted space in which it is nevertheless possible to negotiate a cultural existence in-between. Here New York is experienced concretely and traumatically, yet also, paradoxically, accepted as home. Throughout, the essay conceives of this history as following the parallel tracks of local (and/or ethnic) narration and of narratives trying to encompass the city from a totalizing perspective. Although this latter tradition of an urban sublime loses impetus in the course of the twentieth century, it nevertheless remains a distinct counterpoint in the history of New York’s literary representations.
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spelling doaj-art-ad5f2c3096fd4fbfadb45201ed1d20fa2025-01-09T12:54:28ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182010-03-017210.4000/erea.1069Envisioning Metropolis—New York as Seen, Imaged and ImaginedHeinz ICKSTADTThe essay first sketches the geography of literary New York from the Bowery and the Lower East Side to Harlem; then fills out the geographic space with chapters of New York’s literary history from modernism and its myth of metropolis (in Dos Passos, Joseph Stella and Hart Crane) to the collapse of this vision of an urban sublime during the Great Depression. It subsequently discusses more playful versions of the urban in Pop Art and literary texts of the 1970s and 1980s, before it turns to contemporary fiction where the modernist tradition of an urban sublime is deconstructed and metropolitan space reconceived as part of a larger transnational system of information, global money flows and migratory movements. In novels of Don DeLillo, Cristina García, Kiran Desai and Colson Whitehead, the city is seen as a space of abstract interconnectedness as well as of alienation at its social and economic margins; as a culturally conflicted space in which it is nevertheless possible to negotiate a cultural existence in-between. Here New York is experienced concretely and traumatically, yet also, paradoxically, accepted as home. Throughout, the essay conceives of this history as following the parallel tracks of local (and/or ethnic) narration and of narratives trying to encompass the city from a totalizing perspective. Although this latter tradition of an urban sublime loses impetus in the course of the twentieth century, it nevertheless remains a distinct counterpoint in the history of New York’s literary representations.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/1069New York as a space of literary and artistic historyrealism/naturalismliterature and art of the urban sublimeNew York as space of local and ethnic narrationpostmodernist abstractions and landscapes of surfacesNew York as global city and migratory space in contemporary fiction.
spellingShingle Heinz ICKSTADT
Envisioning Metropolis—New York as Seen, Imaged and Imagined
E-REA
New York as a space of literary and artistic history
realism/naturalism
literature and art of the urban sublime
New York as space of local and ethnic narration
postmodernist abstractions and landscapes of surfaces
New York as global city and migratory space in contemporary fiction.
title Envisioning Metropolis—New York as Seen, Imaged and Imagined
title_full Envisioning Metropolis—New York as Seen, Imaged and Imagined
title_fullStr Envisioning Metropolis—New York as Seen, Imaged and Imagined
title_full_unstemmed Envisioning Metropolis—New York as Seen, Imaged and Imagined
title_short Envisioning Metropolis—New York as Seen, Imaged and Imagined
title_sort envisioning metropolis new york as seen imaged and imagined
topic New York as a space of literary and artistic history
realism/naturalism
literature and art of the urban sublime
New York as space of local and ethnic narration
postmodernist abstractions and landscapes of surfaces
New York as global city and migratory space in contemporary fiction.
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/1069
work_keys_str_mv AT heinzickstadt envisioningmetropolisnewyorkasseenimagedandimagined