From a “Garden of Disorder” to a “Nest of Flames”: Charles Henri Ford’s Surrealist Inflections

Virtually omitted from established narratives of American modernism, yet central in the histories of the reception of European Surrealism in the US, Charles Henri Ford’s life and work have been recovered in important queer genealogies within Anglo-American modernism. Yet within this process or recov...

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Main Author: Stamatina Dimakopoulou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès 2017-04-01
Series:Miranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/9822
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spelling doaj-8acd10535aa24de2b37dad099b4cc6412020-11-25T00:27:37ZengUniversité Toulouse - Jean JaurèsMiranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone2108-65592017-04-011410.4000/miranda.9822From a “Garden of Disorder” to a “Nest of Flames”: Charles Henri Ford’s Surrealist InflectionsStamatina DimakopoulouVirtually omitted from established narratives of American modernism, yet central in the histories of the reception of European Surrealism in the US, Charles Henri Ford’s life and work have been recovered in important queer genealogies within Anglo-American modernism. Yet within this process or recovery, Ford’s poetic work is still largely overlooked, and this may have to do less with its marked Surrealist influences and/or derivative aspects than with the somewhat unclassifiable and composite texture of Ford’s poems. This article revisits Ford’s early poetry as a space of convergence and dialogue between distinct yet interrelated poetics: from the 1938 A Garden of Disorder to the 1949, Sleep in a Nest of Flames, a queer subjectivity assimilates concurrently Surrealist poetics and Djuna Barnes’s equally unclassifiable queer modernism with and against American poetic modernisms.http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/9822queer modernismAmerican poetrysexualitysurrealism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stamatina Dimakopoulou
spellingShingle Stamatina Dimakopoulou
From a “Garden of Disorder” to a “Nest of Flames”: Charles Henri Ford’s Surrealist Inflections
Miranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone
queer modernism
American poetry
sexuality
surrealism
author_facet Stamatina Dimakopoulou
author_sort Stamatina Dimakopoulou
title From a “Garden of Disorder” to a “Nest of Flames”: Charles Henri Ford’s Surrealist Inflections
title_short From a “Garden of Disorder” to a “Nest of Flames”: Charles Henri Ford’s Surrealist Inflections
title_full From a “Garden of Disorder” to a “Nest of Flames”: Charles Henri Ford’s Surrealist Inflections
title_fullStr From a “Garden of Disorder” to a “Nest of Flames”: Charles Henri Ford’s Surrealist Inflections
title_full_unstemmed From a “Garden of Disorder” to a “Nest of Flames”: Charles Henri Ford’s Surrealist Inflections
title_sort from a “garden of disorder” to a “nest of flames”: charles henri ford’s surrealist inflections
publisher Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès
series Miranda: Revue Pluridisciplinaire du Monde Anglophone
issn 2108-6559
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Virtually omitted from established narratives of American modernism, yet central in the histories of the reception of European Surrealism in the US, Charles Henri Ford’s life and work have been recovered in important queer genealogies within Anglo-American modernism. Yet within this process or recovery, Ford’s poetic work is still largely overlooked, and this may have to do less with its marked Surrealist influences and/or derivative aspects than with the somewhat unclassifiable and composite texture of Ford’s poems. This article revisits Ford’s early poetry as a space of convergence and dialogue between distinct yet interrelated poetics: from the 1938 A Garden of Disorder to the 1949, Sleep in a Nest of Flames, a queer subjectivity assimilates concurrently Surrealist poetics and Djuna Barnes’s equally unclassifiable queer modernism with and against American poetic modernisms.
topic queer modernism
American poetry
sexuality
surrealism
url http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/9822
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