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Cultural immaterialism: Wallace Stevens in virtual Paris

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Cultural immaterialism: Wallace Stevens in virtual Paris. / Sharpe, Tony.
In: Key Words : A Journal of Cultural Materialism, Vol. 12, 2014, p. 108-124.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sharpe, T 2014, 'Cultural immaterialism: Wallace Stevens in virtual Paris', Key Words : A Journal of Cultural Materialism, vol. 12, pp. 108-124.

APA

Sharpe, T. (2014). Cultural immaterialism: Wallace Stevens in virtual Paris. Key Words : A Journal of Cultural Materialism, 12, 108-124.

Vancouver

Sharpe T. Cultural immaterialism: Wallace Stevens in virtual Paris. Key Words : A Journal of Cultural Materialism. 2014;12:108-124.

Author

Sharpe, Tony. / Cultural immaterialism : Wallace Stevens in virtual Paris. In: Key Words : A Journal of Cultural Materialism. 2014 ; Vol. 12. pp. 108-124.

Bibtex

@article{e0235e39f7ba44a3bdf5e66efe7b1daa,
title = "Cultural immaterialism: Wallace Stevens in virtual Paris",
abstract = "This essay explores the paradox in Stevens{\textquoteright}s life and career that, notwithstanding his interest in France and especially Paris, he stood out from nearly all other American Modernist writers by the fact that he never visited Europe, even though more than some who did he endorsed the significance of what the French capital could offer. I shall suggest that the Paris Stevens denied himself strangely became the {\textquoteleft}Paris{\textquoteright} he achieved, and that his identification with the city was one that by its own logic not only did not require him to pay a visit, but in time rendered it essential that he should not do so; this uncovers something central to Stevens{\textquoteright}s poetry, and also to his Americanness. The quotation above offers terms helpful in discussing his attachment to {\textquoteleft}virtual Paris{\textquoteright}: where and what {\textquoteleft}there{\textquoteright} is, and how the strangeness of being {\textquoteleft}there{\textquoteright} is connected with its truthfulness, for the {\textquoteleft}I{\textquoteright} engaged in finding itself.",
author = "Tony Sharpe",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "108--124",
journal = "Key Words : A Journal of Cultural Materialism",
issn = "1369-9725",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cultural immaterialism

T2 - Wallace Stevens in virtual Paris

AU - Sharpe, Tony

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - This essay explores the paradox in Stevens’s life and career that, notwithstanding his interest in France and especially Paris, he stood out from nearly all other American Modernist writers by the fact that he never visited Europe, even though more than some who did he endorsed the significance of what the French capital could offer. I shall suggest that the Paris Stevens denied himself strangely became the ‘Paris’ he achieved, and that his identification with the city was one that by its own logic not only did not require him to pay a visit, but in time rendered it essential that he should not do so; this uncovers something central to Stevens’s poetry, and also to his Americanness. The quotation above offers terms helpful in discussing his attachment to ‘virtual Paris’: where and what ‘there’ is, and how the strangeness of being ‘there’ is connected with its truthfulness, for the ‘I’ engaged in finding itself.

AB - This essay explores the paradox in Stevens’s life and career that, notwithstanding his interest in France and especially Paris, he stood out from nearly all other American Modernist writers by the fact that he never visited Europe, even though more than some who did he endorsed the significance of what the French capital could offer. I shall suggest that the Paris Stevens denied himself strangely became the ‘Paris’ he achieved, and that his identification with the city was one that by its own logic not only did not require him to pay a visit, but in time rendered it essential that he should not do so; this uncovers something central to Stevens’s poetry, and also to his Americanness. The quotation above offers terms helpful in discussing his attachment to ‘virtual Paris’: where and what ‘there’ is, and how the strangeness of being ‘there’ is connected with its truthfulness, for the ‘I’ engaged in finding itself.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 108

EP - 124

JO - Key Words : A Journal of Cultural Materialism

JF - Key Words : A Journal of Cultural Materialism

SN - 1369-9725

ER -