
This book examines Ezra Pound's own critical writing in an effort to establish its links both to 19th-century thought and to modern critical movements ranging from New Criticism to post-structuralism. In Reading Pound Reading, Kathryne Lindberg argues that traditional Modernist views of Pound held by the literary academy fail to describe the work of a writer who defied all literary boundaries--including the literary practices and tenets of "modernism." Because Pound had no coherent aesthetics--he read against ideas and opposed generalizations--he adapted reading strategies from discourses as varied as philosophy, anthropology, sinology, entymology, physics, and politics. Through a careful analysis of Pound's often forgotten literary and cultural criticism, Lindberg reveals the elements it shares with certain Nietzschean habits of reading, and uncovers surprising links with such unlikely accomplices as Emerson, Whitman, Williams, and Charles Olson. Under this scrutiny, Pound's cultural criticism yields a kind of reading that is at once avant-garde, neo-Nietzschean, and undeniably American.
This book investigates the critical writings of Ezra Pound to determine how his unconventional reading habits and rejection of aesthetic coherence align with Nietzschean philosophy and broader American intellectual traditions. Kathryne V. Lindberg, a scholar of modernist literature, challenges the established academic consensus that views Pound through a rigid modernist lens. By analyzing his diverse influences—ranging from physics and anthropology to politics—Lindberg argues that Pound functioned as a radical reader who actively dismantled literary boundaries. Her framework positions Pound not as a static figure of modernism, but as a dynamic, neo-Nietzschean thinker whose work anticipates post-structuralist critical movements.
What You Will Find
Scholars and literary critics frequently cite this work for its rigorous re-evaluation of Pound's intellectual legacy. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for those already familiar with modernist theory and the specific critical history of Ezra Pound's body of work.
Page Count:
306
Publication Date:
1987-04-23
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195041658
ISBN-13:
9780195041651
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