Men of Letters: W.B. Yeats’s A Packet for Ezra Pound (1929)
If Bakhtin’s “dialogic imagination” suggests the novel’s discourse is structured to expect an answer, Yeats’s dialogic imagination is best expressed in non-fictional prose. Acting as preface to A Vision (1937), as published in 1929 by Cuala Press, A Packet for Ezra Pound asserts an often overlooked...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)
2018-06-01
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Series: | E-REA |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.openedition.org/erea/6247 |
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Summary: | If Bakhtin’s “dialogic imagination” suggests the novel’s discourse is structured to expect an answer, Yeats’s dialogic imagination is best expressed in non-fictional prose. Acting as preface to A Vision (1937), as published in 1929 by Cuala Press, A Packet for Ezra Pound asserts an often overlooked independent existence. Considering it formally alongside Yeats’s letters as a bookish yet speech-driven manifesto, this paper argues that what appears as a provisional, peripheral, prefatorial work is nonetheless central to understanding Yeats and Pound’s evolving thinking, and critical to an understanding of modernist networks. Its genre-bending, pan-artistic vision, intertextuality, and playing with paratextual apparatus produces a self-conscious construction typical of modernism, even as it claims distance from modernist aesthetics and dissents from its politics. |
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ISSN: | 1638-1718 |