Synopses & Reviews
Painterly Abstraction in Modernist American Poetry concentrates on the challenges posed to poetry by modernist painting: how could the poets adapt to the painters' abilities to recast our understanding of the psyche's needs, powers, and social dependencies, and how could they share the painters' efforts to find alternatives to what seemed the inescapably ideological grounds for all value claims? By stressing the poets' ways of making the syntax of artworks carry semantic force, this orientation generates a much more dynamic, philosophically stimulating sense of modernist poetry than the ones offered by the dominant styles of political critique.
Review
“Painterly Abstraction in Modernist American Poetry is full of valuable insights and analyses. What Altieri offers here is an exhaustive discussion of modernist abstraction, beginning with an analysis of abstractionist (particularly constructivist) aesthetics and practice and the roots of abstraction in the romantic tradition and in Kant, before moving to close readings of several poets. . . . [T]his book is a study rich in insights and an important addition to current debates about modernism.”
—American Literature
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 507-524) and index.
About the Author
Charles Altieri is Professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley. His books include Self and Sensibility in Contemporary American Poetry (1984), Canons and Consequences: Reflections on the Ethical Force of Imaginative Ideals (1990), and Subjective Agency (1994).