Decadence in the Age of Modernism begins where the history of the decadent movement all too often ends: in 1895. It argues that the decadent principles and aesthetics of Oscar Wilde, Walter Pater, Algernon Swinburne, and others continued to exert a compelling legacy on the next generation of writers, from high modernists and late decadents to writers of the Harlem Renaissance. Writers associated with this decadent counterculture were consciously celebrated but more often blushingly denied, even as they exerted a compelling influence on the early twentieth century. Offering a multifaceted critical revision of how modernism evolved out of, and coexisted with, the decadent movement, the essays in this collection reveal how decadent principles infused twentieth-century prose, poetry, drama, and newspapers. In particular, this book demonstrates the potent impact of decadence on the evolution of queer identity and self-fashioning in the early twentieth century. In close readings of an eclectic range of works by Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence to Ronald Firbank, Bruce Nugent, and Carl Van Vechten, these essays grapple with a range of related issues, including individualism, the end of Empire, the politics of camp, experimentalism, and the critique of modernity.
Author(s): Kate Hext, Alex Murray
Series: Hopkins Studies in Modernism
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 300
Tags: Decadence, Age Of Modernism
Cover......Page 1
Half Title......Page 2
Title......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Acknowledgments......Page 8
Introduction......Page 12
1 Dainty Malice: Ada Leverson and Post-Victorian Decadent Feminism......Page 38
2 The Ugly Things of Salome......Page 58
3 Decadent Paths and Percolations after 1895......Page 82
4 “A Poetess of No Mean Order”: Margaret Sackville, Women’s Poetry, and the Legacy of Aestheticism......Page 100
5 The Queer Drift of Firbank......Page 129
6 Burning the Candle at Both Ends: Edna St. Vincent Millay’s Decadence......Page 146
7 Woolf and Joyce, Barnes and Beckett: The Legacy of Decadence in Major Modernist Novels......Page 172
8 “The Woodland Whose Depths and Whose Heights Were Pan’s”: Swinburne and Lawrence, Decadence and Modernism......Page 190
9 The Naughtiness of the Avant-Garde: Donald Evans, Claire Marie, and Tender Buttons......Page 208
10 The Queerness of Being 1890 in 1922: Carl Van Vechten and the New Decadence......Page 240
11 A Decadent Dream Deferred: Bruce Nugent and the Harlem Renaissance’s Queer Modernity......Page 262
Contributors......Page 288
B......Page 292
C......Page 293
F......Page 294
J......Page 295
M......Page 296
O......Page 297
S......Page 298
T......Page 299
Y......Page 300