Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Literary Criticism General

Modernist Goods

Primitivism, the Market and the Gift

by (author) Glenn Willmott

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Jul 2008
Category
General
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780802097699
    Publish Date
    Jul 2008
    List Price
    $91.00
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442692466
    Publish Date
    Jul 2008
    List Price
    $67
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442688643
    Publish Date
    Dec 2008
    List Price
    $91.00

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

The politicised interpretation of literature has relied on models of economic and social structures that oscillate between idealized subversion and market fatalism. Current anthropological discussions of mixed gift and commodity economies and the segmented politics of house societies offer solutions to this problem and suggest invaluable new directions for literary studies. Modernist Goods uses recent discussions of gift and house practices to counter an influential revisionist trend in modernist studies, a trend that sees the capitalist marketplace and its public sphere as the uniquely determining institutional structures in modern arts and culture.

Glenn Willmott argues that a political unconscious forged by the widespread marginalisation of pre-capitalist institutions comes to the fore in modernist primitivism. Such primitivism, he insists, is not superficially exoticist or simply appropriative of the cultural heritage of others. Rather, it is at once parodic and authentic, and often, in the language of Julia Kristeva, abject. Modernist Goods examines such writers as Yeats, Conrad, Eliot, Woolf, Beckett, H.D., and Joyce to uncover what the author views as their displaced aboriginality and to investigate the relationship between literary modernism and aboriginal modernity. By bringing current anthropological developments to literary studies, it aims to rethink the economic commitments of modernist literature and their political significance.

About the author

Glenn Willmott is a professor in the Department of English at Queen's University.

Glenn Willmott's profile page