Session 4 I'll lecture for some of this week's class. If I lecture I'll probably repeat what I've been thinking and publishing on the subject. To give you a sense of my current thinking on these issues, I append a recent essay (by me) on Ezra Pound and how modernism uses translation. You might as well read it as to have me repeat it to you-we can use the time more efficiently in this way and can open more comfortably into conversation. See the study materials section for the referenced essay.
Session 7
I'll lecture for some of this week's class. If I lecture I'll probably repeat what I've been thinking and publishing on the subject. To give you a sense of my current thinking on these issues, I append a recent essay (by me) on Charlie Chaplin and how modernism poetry uses image-techniques derived from film. The point is not only that the poems allude to Chaplin, but that they often derive their own sense of literary aesthetics, paradoxically, from film aesthetics. You might as well read the argument as to have me repeat it to you. I should mention that this essay is a bit self-reflexive-it deals with the dynamic of teaching MIT students-and that it's strictly a draft. I'll be interested to hear if its account of MIT classroom dynamics reflects your own sense of those dynamics. See the study materials section for the referenced essay.
| | 1 | Introductions 
 Origins of Modernism I
 
 Symbolist Textuality, Aestheticism, Relation to Image the Flaneur and the City
 |  | 2 | Origins of Modernism II 
 The End of Victorianism
 
 Ethics and Aesthetics
 
 Oratory and the Performative
 
 Darwin and Social Change
 |  | 3 | Origins of Modernism: III 
 World War I
 
 The End of the Discourse of Rationalism
 
 The Empire Break Down
 |  | 4 | Modernism and Orientalism 
 The Ideogram
 
 Gender and Translation ('Feminizing' Asia)
 
 The War at Home
 
 F.S. Flint
 |  | 5 | The Modern Image and Sculpture 
 Early Wittgenstein and the Status of the Image
 |  | 6 | Montage and Film-history 
 Radio Aesthetics
 
 The Photographic Image and the Liteary Image
 
 The Image as Repository of Desire
 |  | 7 | Chaplin as Everyman, Chaplin as Subversive
 Modern Irony and Chaplin's Sentimentalilty
 
 'Machine' Aesthetics
 |  | 8 | The Psychology of Self-revelation 
 Time, Change, and the Image in 'Prufrock'
 
 The Image as Repoistory of Meaning
 |  | 9 | The "Mythic Method" and History 
 The Working Papers to "The Waste Land", and Ezra Pound's Editing
 
 Anthropology, Distance, and Irony: "The Golden Bough"
 |  | 10 | The Status of Allusion 
 Speech, Speechlessness, and the Buddha
 |  | 11 | Williams: "Waste Land" as the "Great Catastrophe" 
 Free Verse and the American Idiom
 
 "'Medical' Aesthetics: Why a 'Contagious Hospital'?"
 |  | 12 | Words as Things 
 Constructionism and Objectivism
 
 The Gendered 'Gaze'
 
 Class Distinctions in High Modernism
 |  | 13-14 | Harlem Renaissance 
 Jazz, Race, and Gender
 |  | 15 | Woolf 
 Mr. Ramsay and the Limits of Reason: Lines
 
 Mrs. Ramsay and the Expansion of Consciousness: Circles
 |  | 16 | Woolf (cont.) 
 Lily's Androgynous Vision
 |  | 17 | Yeats 
 Pound
 
 Stevens
 
 Doolittle
 
 Auden
 
 Conquest
 
 Ashbery
 
 Art, Disillusionment, and Modernist Form
 
 Aestheticism as Ritual, as Religion
 |  | 18 | Yeats (cont.) 
 "Sailing to Byzantium": What's the Problem? [Stanzas 1 and 2]
 |  | 19 | Yeats (cont.) 
 "Sailing to Byzantium": Where to Look for a Resolution? [Stanzas 3 and 4]
 |  | 20 | Yeats (cont.) 
 Stevens
 
 Stevens, Repetition, and Language: Emerson meets Heidegger
 |  | 21 | Stevens (cont.) 
 Displaced Spirituality and Modernrist Compensaion ["Sunday Morning" - Stanzas 1 and 2]
 |  | 22 | Stevens (cont.) 
 Versions of "Sunday Morning"
 
 Transcendenence and the Image
 
 Keats and Stevens: The Last Stanza of "Sunday Morning"
 |  | 23-25 | Student Presentations | 
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