Title
The Geometry Of Modernism: The Vorticist Idiom In Lewis, Pound, H.D., And Yeats (Literary Modernism),Used
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Addressing both the literature and the visual arts of AngloAmerican modernism, The Geometry of Modernism recovers a crucial development of modernism's early years that until now has received little sustained critical attention: the distinctive idiom composed of geometric forms and metaphors generated within the early modernist movement of Vorticism, formed in London in 1914. Focusing on the work of Wyndham Lewis, leader of the Vorticist movement, as well as Ezra Pound, H.D., and William Butler Yeats, Hickman examines the complex of motives out of which Lewis initially forged the geometric lexicon of Vorticismand then how Pound, H.D., and Yeats later responded to it and the values that it encoded, enlisting both the geometric vocabulary and its attendant assumptions and ideals, in transmuted form, in their later modernist work.Placing the genesis and appropriation of the geometric idiom in historical context, Hickman explores how despite its brevity as a moveme
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