This innovative book puts modernist literature in its cultural, intellectual, and global context, within the framework of the year 1913.
- Broadens the analysis of canonical texts and artistic events by showing their cultural and global parallels
- Examines a number of simultaneous artistic, literary, and political endeavours including those of Yeats, Pound, Joyce, Du Bois and Stravinsky
- Explores Pound's Personae next to Apollinaire's Alcools and Rilke's Spanish Trilogy, Edith Wharton's The Custom of the Country next to Proust's Swann's Way
List of Illustrations vi
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Modernism, Crisis, and Early Globalization 1
1 The New in the Arts 18
2 Collective Agencies 46
3 Everyday Life and the New Episteme 72
4 Learning to be Modern in 1913 96
5 Global Culture and the Invention of the Other 118
6 The Splintered Subject of Modernism 141
7 At War with Oneself: The Last Cosmopolitan Travels of German and Austrian Modernism 164
8 Modernism and the End of Nostalgia 185
Conclusion: Antagonisms 208
Notes 217
Index 235
While reading Rabatk's book I constantly had in mind Theodor Adorno's remark to Walter Benjamin about the latter's habit of 'occult adjacentism'.  Adorno, of course, meant this as a damning criticism of his friend's method in the
Arcades project, but it beautifully describes the effect of 1913 and its kaleidoscopic presentation of a world that troublingly-uncannily-intimates our ol³Ü