A Phosphorous History: William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain

Through a reading of William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain (1925), this paper seeks to look at the questions raised by the writing of history in the modernist context and to explore Williams’ particular definition of history.Williams’ historical project turns history into a literary questio...

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Main Author: Antonia Rigaud
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2016-06-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/11505
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spelling doaj-33a169de2d3447c48674edf5a8b7ddec2020-11-25T02:18:42ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362016-06-0111110.4000/ejas.11505A Phosphorous History: William Carlos Williams’ In the American GrainAntonia RigaudThrough a reading of William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain (1925), this paper seeks to look at the questions raised by the writing of history in the modernist context and to explore Williams’ particular definition of history.Williams’ historical project turns history into a literary question through a text that is a collage of very different voices, narratives, and shifts of perspective, thus raising the question of how to write history. Williams’ foreword suggests the impossibility of writing a true history and points rather to the desire to capture an evanescent reality, what he calls “the phosphorus of the life”. Williams attempts to write the history of a “homemade world” to use Hugh Kenner’s eloquent phrase; rather than looking at Europe as his friend Pound was doing at the time, the text presents variations on recurring motifs of American history, problematizing the notion of a “new” continent and of the discovery of place. Williams’ poetic repossession of history calls for a reflection on the type of history he sought to write. In the American Grain looks at the “beginners” that have made American history, from the Spanish explorers to Poe, and questions the naïve notion of “beginning”. William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain is a biography of the American cultural imagination that puts in dialogue the national epic with a perspectival counter history.http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/11505anthropologybeginningscultural criticismD. H. LawrencediscoveryEzra Pound
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antonia Rigaud
spellingShingle Antonia Rigaud
A Phosphorous History: William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain
European Journal of American Studies
anthropology
beginnings
cultural criticism
D. H. Lawrence
discovery
Ezra Pound
author_facet Antonia Rigaud
author_sort Antonia Rigaud
title A Phosphorous History: William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain
title_short A Phosphorous History: William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain
title_full A Phosphorous History: William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain
title_fullStr A Phosphorous History: William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain
title_full_unstemmed A Phosphorous History: William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain
title_sort phosphorous history: william carlos williams’ in the american grain
publisher European Association for American Studies
series European Journal of American Studies
issn 1991-9336
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Through a reading of William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain (1925), this paper seeks to look at the questions raised by the writing of history in the modernist context and to explore Williams’ particular definition of history.Williams’ historical project turns history into a literary question through a text that is a collage of very different voices, narratives, and shifts of perspective, thus raising the question of how to write history. Williams’ foreword suggests the impossibility of writing a true history and points rather to the desire to capture an evanescent reality, what he calls “the phosphorus of the life”. Williams attempts to write the history of a “homemade world” to use Hugh Kenner’s eloquent phrase; rather than looking at Europe as his friend Pound was doing at the time, the text presents variations on recurring motifs of American history, problematizing the notion of a “new” continent and of the discovery of place. Williams’ poetic repossession of history calls for a reflection on the type of history he sought to write. In the American Grain looks at the “beginners” that have made American history, from the Spanish explorers to Poe, and questions the naïve notion of “beginning”. William Carlos Williams’ In the American Grain is a biography of the American cultural imagination that puts in dialogue the national epic with a perspectival counter history.
topic anthropology
beginnings
cultural criticism
D. H. Lawrence
discovery
Ezra Pound
url http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/11505
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