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Ghostwriting Modernism »

Book cover image of Ghostwriting Modernism by Helen Sword

Authors: Helen Sword
ISBN-13: 9780801487750, ISBN-10: 0801487757
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Date Published: February 2002
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Helen Sword

Book Synopsis

Spiritualism is often dismissed by literary critics and historians as merely a Victorian fad. Helen Sword demonstrates that it continued to flourish well into the twentieth century and seeks to explain why. Literary modernism, she maintains, is replete with ghosts and spirits. In Ghostwriting Modernism she explores spiritualism's striking persistence and what she calls "the vexed relationship between mediumistic discourse and modernist literary aesthetics."

Sword begins with a brief historical review of popular spiritualism's roots in nineteenth-century literary culture. In subsequent chapters, she discusses the forms of mediumship most closely allied with writing, the forms of writing most closely allied with mediumship, and the thematic and aesthetic alliances between popular spiritualism and modernist literature. Finally, she accounts for the recent proliferation of a spiritualist-influenced vocabulary (ghostliness, hauntings, the uncanny) in the works of historians, sociologists, philosophers, and especially literary critics and theorists.

Documenting the hitherto unexplored relationship between spiritualism and modern authors (some credulous, some skeptical), Sword offers compelling readings of works by James Joyce, T. S. Eliot, W. B. Yeats, H.D., James Merrill, Sylvia Plath, and Ted Hughes. Even as modernists mock spiritualism's ludicrous lingo and deride its metaphysical excesses, she finds, they are intrigued and attracted by its ontological shiftiness, its blurring of the traditional divide between high culture and low culture, and its self-serving tendency to favor form over content (medium, so to speak, over message). Like modernism itself, Sword asserts, spiritualism embraces rather than eschews paradox, providing an ideological space where conservative beliefs can coexist with radical, even iconoclastic, thought and action.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction: Ghostwriting1
Ch. 1Necrobibliography10
Books in the Spirit World
Ghosts in the Library
Ch. 2The Undeath of the Author32
Apophrades
Spirit Mediums and Dead White Men
Ch. 3Necrobardolatry49
Specters of Shakespeare
Joyce, Dowden, and the Father's Spirit
Ch. 4Metaphorical Mediumship76
Low Haunts, High Art
Doing Eliot in Different Voices
Ch. 5Modernist Hauntology103
Yeats, Mediums, and the Desolate Places
H. D.'s Cryptopoetics
Ch. 6Ghostwriting Postmodernism132
Plath, Merrill, and the Politics of Ouija
The Haunting of Ted Hughes
Epilogue: Ghostreading159
Notes167
Bibliography187
Index205

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