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Temple, Emily LitHub Pocket Guide to 10 Literary Movements

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Your Pocket Guide to 10 Literary Movements
Never Again Will You Have Nothing to Say at a Literary Dinner Party
Source: https://lithub.com/your-pocket-guide-to-10-literary-movements/
By Emily Temple
April 5, 2018
Literary movements are the kinds of things you learn about in school, then maybe join, or just
steal from, or decide to hate for a while, and then . . . usually forget about. But it’s useful to
know about them, in case it ever comes up at an Important Literary Dinner Party (do those still
exist?) or your next job interview (do those still exist?) or pop quiz (run). Whatever the
circumstance, you can now use this handy pocket guide (your phone is in your pocket, after all)
to 10 literary movements. NB that these are not all the literary movements you should know, of
course, but honestly? They’re some of the most fun to discuss at parties.
Modernism
Origins: Less an organized movement than an era, literary modernism emerged in England
around 1910 as a reaction against Romanticism in the wake of the First World War.
Prevailing principles: According to the Norton Anthology of English Literature, “what connects
the modernist writers—aside from a rich web of personal and professional connections—is a
shared desire to break with established forms and subjects in art and literature.” That often meant
a rejection of “realistic representation” and traditional forms. Modernist literature is
characterized by stream-of-consciousness narration, a focus on psychological investigation as
opposed to plot, and a blend of high and low language.
Figures of importance: Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, T.S. Eliot
What to read first: Mrs Dalloway, Virginia Woolf
What to say at your next literary dinner party: “Hey guys, remember that time Virginia
Woolf wore blackface? Yikes.”
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The Harlem Renaissance
Origins: In the early part of the 20th century, African Americans, faced with legal segregation,
rampant racism, lack of economic opportunities, and unchecked violence, began moving to
Northern states in large numbers, and New York’s Harlem was particularly popular. This led to a
cultural and intellectual surge in Harlem, and what James Weldon Johnson called a “flowering of
Negro literature.” At the time, it was often referred to as “The New Negro Movement” or “The
New Negro Renaissance,” after an anthology of African American work edited by Alain Locke
and titled (you guessed it) The New Negro. Most people consider the Harlem Renaissance to
have begun in the late 1910s and ended around 1930.
Prevailing principles: According to the Academy of American Poets, though there was no
overall set of “principles,” the Harlem Renaissance was characterized most distinctly by
lyricism, formal innovation, and (importantly) an examination and celebration of African
American life and identity.
Figures of importance: Langston Hughes, Jean Toomer, Arna Bontemps, Countee Cullen,
Angelina Weld Grimké, Claude McKay, Nella Larsen, James Weldon Johnson, Zora Neale
Hurston
What to read first: The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes
What to say at your next literary dinner party: Did you know that Langston Hughes is buried
under the floor of the Schomburg Center?
Dada
Origins: Dadaism is an art and literary movement that began in Zürich around 1915 as a reaction
against traditional, realist (and capitalist) aesthetics. As the German writer Hugo Ball wrote in
1916, “The image of the human form is gradually disappearing from the painting of these times
and all objects appear only in fragments. . . The next step is for poetry to decide to do away with
language.”
Prevailing principles: Irreverence, nonsense, randomness.
Figures of importance: André Breton, Tristan Tzara, Hugo Ball
What to read first: “To make a Dadist poem,” Tristan Tzara
What to say at your next literary dinner party: Surprise me.
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Postmodernism
Origins: Postmodernism is even less well-defined than modernism, and in fact the two are very
similar. It may have emerged in the 1940s, but you can see examples of it as it is now defined
much further back than that. Perhaps postmodernism has always been and always will be.
Prevailing principles: Postmodernism is notoriously difficult to define, but in the broadest
sense, it tends to refer to literature that uses a self-aware playfulness as a central theme, and that
in some way is tackling literature itself as its project as well as its presentation. Carolyn Kellogg
identified a few postmodern qualities (for a good list of 61 essential postmodern reads that I still
reference often)—a postmodern novel might have all or any of these elements: author as a
character; self-contradicting plot; disrupts/plays with form; comments on its own bookishness;
plays with language; includes fiction artifacts, such as letters; blurs reality and fiction; includes
historical falsehoods; overtly references other fictional works; more than 1,000 pages; less than
200 pages.
In his 1967 essay “The Literature of Exhaustion,” John Barth wrote:
My ideal Postmodernist author neither merely repudiates nor merely imitates either his
20th-century Modernist parents or his 19th-century premodernist grandparents. He has the first
half of our century under his belt, but not on his back. Without lapsing into moral or artistic
simplism, shoddy craftsmanship, Madison Avenue venality, or either false or real naiveté, he
nevertheless aspires to a fiction more democratic in its appeal than such late-Modernist marvels
as Beckett’s Texts for Nothing… The ideal Postmodernist novel will somehow rise above the
quarrel between realism and irrealism, formalism and “contentism,” pure and committed
literature, coterie fiction and junk fiction…
Figures of importance: David Foster Wallace, Kathy Acker, Roberto Bolaño, William Faulkner,
William Gaddis, William H. Gass, David Markson
What to read first: In the Heart of the Heart of the Country, William H. Gass
What to say at your next literary dinner party: “Hell hath no fury like a coolly received
postmodernist.” (Whether you admit that you’re quoting David Foster Wallace will, of course,
depend on your current intellectual project.)
The Beat Generation
Origins: According to Allen Ginsberg himself, “the phrase “Beat Generation” rose out of a
specific conversation with Jack Kerouac and John Clellon Holmes in 1950-51 when discussing
the nature of generations, recollecting the glamour of the ‘lost generation.'”
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Kerouac discouraged the notion of a coherent “generation” and said, “Ah, this is nothing but a
beat generation!” They discussed whether it was a “found” generation, which Kerouac
sometimes referred to, or “angelic” generation, or various other epithets. But Kerouac waved
away the question and said “beat generation!” not meaning to name the generation but to
un-name it. John Clellon Holmes then wrote an article in late 1952 in the New York Times
magazine section with the headline title of the article, “This is the Beat Generation.” And that
caught on.
Prevailing principles: The Beats’ writing can be generally characterized by an
anti-establishment sensibility, a looseness of form, rejection of the rules of language and of
traditional academic constraints (indeed a “general liberation,” as Ginsberg put it), a filterless
immediacy of language, and a nigh-debilitating interest in drugs and sex.
Figures of importance: Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, William S. Burroughs, Gregory Corso
What to read first: Howl, Allen Ginsberg
What to say at your next literary dinner party: “Cheers to Gary Snyder—who is actually still
alive somewhere.”
Oulipo
Origins: This experimental French literary movement was founded in 1960 by François Le
Lionnais (a mathematician) and Raymond Queneau (a writer). The name is an acronym for
Ouvroir de Littérature Potentielle (Workshop for Potential Literature).
Prevailing principles: According to the Poetry Foundation: “Oulipo rejects spontaneous chance
and the subconscious as sources of literary creativity. Instead, the group emphasizes systematic,
self-restricting means of making texts.” Oulipo literature is characterized by its use of constraints
to create texts—for instance, the n + 7 technique, in which a writer takes an existing poem or
prose sample and replaces every noun with the noun 7 entries after it in the dictionary (there is a
very amusing widget that will do this for you online), and the snowball, in which every word in a
poem must be one letter longer than the word it follows. They also used palindromes, math
problems, and lipograms—works that leave out certain letters—the most famous of these being
Georges Perec’s 1969 novel La Disparition (A Void, tr. Gilbert Adair), which omits the letter e.
Figures of importance: Raymond Queneau, Georges Perec, Italo Calvino, Anne F. Garréta,
Marcel Duchamp
What to read first: Life: A User’s Manual, Georges Perec
What to say at your next literary dinner party: “Oh, n+1? I much prefer n+7.”
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The Black Arts Movement
Origins: The Black Arts movement is the aesthetic arm of the Black Power movement, and is
generally considered to have been launched by poet Amiri Baraka in the 1960s.
Prevailing principles: In his 1968 essay on the Black Arts Movement, Larry Neal defines it this
way:
The Black Arts Movement is radically opposed to any concept of the artist that alienates him
from his community. Black Art is the aesthetic and spiritual sister of the Black Power concept.
As such, it envisions an art that speaks directly to the needs and aspirations of Black America. In
order to perform this task, the black Arts Movement proposes a radical reordering of the Western
cultural aesthetic. It proposes a separate symbolism, mythology, critique, and iconology. The
Black Arts and the Black Power concept both relate broadly to the Afro-American’s desire for
self-determination and nationhood. Both concepts are nationalistic. One is politics; the other with
the art of politics.
He goes on to assert that the Black Arts Movement is not about protest literature but about
speaking “directly to Black people,” creating a new and specific “black aesthetic,” asserting an
African American cultural identity in place of the racist “Western” one. He writes:
It is the opinion of many Black writers, I among them, that the Western aesthetic has run its
course: it is impossible to construct anything meaningful within its decaying structure. We
advocate a cultural revolution in art and ideas. The cultural values inherent in Western history
must either be radicalized or destroyed, and we will probably find that even radicalization is
impossible. In fact, what is needed is a whole new system of ideas.
In practice, as the Academy of American poets pointed out, this meant “a black voice that drew
on African American vernacular, songs, and sermons in free verse that was experimental,
incorporating jazz, the blues, and many linguistic and rhythmic techniques also characteristic of
the Beat movement.”
Figures of importance: Amiri Baraka, Gwendolyn Brooks, Nikki Giovanni, Gil-Scott Heron,
Sonia Sanchez, Haki Madhubuti, Etheridge Knight
What to read first: “Black Art,” Amiri Baraka
What to say at your next literary dinner party: “Poems are bullshit unless they are teeth.”
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Language Poetry
Origins: The Language Poetry movement takes its name from L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E, an
avant-garde magazine edited by Charles Bernstein and Bruce Andrews, which ran from 1978 to
1981.
Prevailing principles: As suggested by the name, Language Poetry places emphasis on the use
of language to create meaning (as opposed to representing meaning via language) and, according
to the Academy of American Poets, “also seeks to involve the reader in the text, placing
importance on reader participation in the construction of meaning. By breaking up poetic
language, the poet is requiring the reader to find a new way to approach the text.”
Figures of importance: Lyn Hejinian, Ron Silliman, Rae Armantrout, Susan Howe, Michael
Palmer
What to read first: My Life, Lyn Hejinian
What to say at your next literary dinner party: “Let us undermine the bourgeoisie.”
Flarf Poetry
Origins: Flarf originated on a poetry listserv (called the Flarflist) in the early 2000s—it seems to
have begun as a joke, or a series of jokes, meant to push back against the strictures of what
poetry was officially supposed to be. It often made use of Google searches, applying cut-up
techniques to the results, and developed into a way to make poetry out of the inherently unpoetic.
Prevailing principles: Per Gary Sullivan, who coined the term:
Flarf: A quality of intentional or unintentional “flarfiness.” A kind of corrosive, cute, or cloying,
awfulness. Wrong. Un-P.C. Out of control. “Not okay.”
Flarf (2): The work of a community of poets dedicated to exploration of “flarfiness.” Heavy
usage of Google search results in the creation of poems, plays, etc., though not exclusively
Google-based. Community in the sense that one example leads to another’s reply—is, in some
part, contingent upon community interaction of this sort. Poems created, revised, changed by
others, incorporated, plagiarized, etc., in semi-public.
Flarf (3) (verb): To bring out the inherent awfulness, etc., of some pre-existing text.
Flarfy: To be wrong, awkward, stumbling, semi-coherent, fucked-up, un-P.C. To take
unexpected turns; to be jarring. Doing what one is “not supposed to do.”
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Sullivan goes on to say: “I was never 100 percent sure what it meant—something akin to
“campy,” but with somewhat different resonances. More awkward, stumbling, “wrong” than
camp. The flarf “voice” in my head was that of my father, a transplanted Southerner who likes to
pontificate, and who has a lot of opinions that kind of horrify me.”
Figures of importance: Gary Sullivan, Drew Gardner, Jordan Davis, Nada Gordon, Mitch
Highfill, Kasey Mohammad
What to read first: Jacket Magazine‘s Flarf feature is a good place to start
What to say at your next literary dinner party: There’s no point in parodying the news when
it’s already flarf—and not the good kind.
Alt Lit
Origins: Alt Lit reared its weird little head in 2011, and was dead, or perhaps undead, by 2014,
in part due to a slew of allegations of rape, sexual abuse, and emotional abuse by its authors.
Prevailing principles: In an interview with Vol. 1 Brooklyn, Stephen Tully Dierks described it
as “a way to label and create shorthand for a preexisting online literary scene that started (to my
knowledge) with a number of personal blogs, gained something of a nexus with the group blog
HTMLGIANT.” Noah Cicero called it “a rejection of the 90s and early part of last decade,”
including The Paris Review, “writing like beatniks or punks and slam poetry,” Dave Eggers,
Jonathan Franzen, and David Foster Wallace. But essentially, it was a bunch of writers
experimenting with forms—as well as socializing and publicizing their work—on the Internet
(before everyone was doing that), working in reaction to the “lit” scene.
It was also characterized by a studied artlessness (g-chats presented as poetry, for instance),
pretty intense misogyny (see above—the work bears it out), and lots of fairly boring and infantile
work that perhaps was simply a growing pain of the Literary Internet. And just to be fair, here is
a description from someone who liked it: “It didn’t seem to obey any rules, other than a seeming
faithfulness its own recurring obsessions: sex, drug use, depression, loneliness, community. It
collapsed lived experience into art, with a boldness that made you wonder whether there ever
needed to be a difference in the first place.”
Figures of importance: Tao Lin, Blake Butler, Mira Gonzalez, Megan Boyle, Marie Calloway
What to read first: Shoplifting From American Apparel, Tao Lin (the ur-text of the movement);
There is No Year, Blake Butler (if you prefer to read someone who has not been accused of
sexual misconduct).
What to say at your next literary dinner party: Did you hear Tao Lin has a new book out? . . . No?
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