Description

Book Synopsis
Futurism began as an artistic and social movement in early twentieth-century Italy. Until now, much of the scholarship available in English has focused only on a single individual or art form. This volume seeks to present a more complete picture of the movement by exploring the history of the movement, the events leading up to the movement, and the lasting impact it has had as well as the individuals involved in it. The History of Futurism: The Precursors, Protagonists, and Legacies addresses the history and legacy of what is generally seen as the founding avante-garde movement of the twentieth century. Geert Buelens, Harald Hendrix, and Monica Jansen have brought together scholarship from an international team of specialists to explore the Futurism movement as a multidisciplinary movement mixing aesthetics, politics, and science with a particular focus on the literature of the movement.

Trade Review
Among the many publications that have emerged for the centenary of Futurism, this stands out for breadth and originality, with an excellent mix of specific case studies and more general theoretical and historical discussions. The presence of some of the most important international scholars on the subject give extra weight and authority of this compelling collection. -- Pierpaolo Antonello, Head of Italian Department, University of Cambridge
Bringing together leading scholars of Futurism from Europe and North America, The History of Futurism: Precursors, Protagonists, and Legacies aims at sketching a new and alternative map of the Italian movement, in which its debts and influences are properly acknowledged and in which supposedly minor figures such as Paolo Buzzi, Volt, or Rosa Rosà are given their rightful place next to F. T. Marinetti in shaping its aesthetics. There are many strengths that make this volume stand out in the increasingly crowded field of Futurist studies. The greatest is perhaps that, by tracing Futurism's roots in late-nineteenth-century poetics such as symbolism as well as its enduring legacy in the second half of the twentieth century, this book reminds us that Futurism was more than one of the many movements of the historical avant-garde: rather, it was one of the shaping forces of literary modernity. -- Luca Somigli, University of Toronto
Was Futurism a dead end of modernism, or has it been an enduring inspiration? Was its ending already fated in its beginning, its adoption of late symbolist and decadent motifs? Or has it left a lasting legacy that continues to reverberate in the arts of today? This volume explores all those questions with probing insight and lively debate. Anyone interested in the arts of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries will treasure this collection of essays. -- Lawrence Rainey, University of York

Table of Contents
1. Futurisms: An Introduction—Geert Buelens and Monica Jansen 2. The Audacity of Hope: The Foundational Futurist Manifestos—Marjorie Perloff Part I. Precursors 3. The Anthology Poeti futuristi: Poetry of Transition—Davide Podavini 4. Marinetti in France between Symbolism and Futurism: Vers et prose and Les guêpes—Eleonora Conti 5. Futurist Roots in Palermo: Federico De Maria between Anticlassicism and Anti-Marinettism—Laura Greco 6. The Statistical Sublime—Jeffrey T. Schnapp 7. Mapping Futurism. Performance in Rome and Across Italy, 1909-1915, with a Coda on Interwar Calabria—Patricia Gaborik Part II. Protagonists 8. Time and Space in the Writings of Marinetti, Palazzeschi, the Group of L’Italia futurista, and Other Futurist Writers—Beatrice Sica 9. The Great War in the Words-in-Freedom Style of an Atypical Futurist: Conflagrazione by Paolo Buzzi—Monica Biasiolo 10. How to Become a Women of the Future: Una donna con tre anime—Un ventre di donna—Silvia Contarini 11. Love, Politics, and an Explosive Future: Volt’s La fine del mondo—Kyle Hall 12. Auto-commentary in Ardengo Soffici’s BIF$ZF+18. Simultaneità e chimismi lirici—Dirk Vanden Berghe 13. Luciano Folgore’s Self-parody: End or Renewal of Futurism?—Stefano Magni 14. Fortunato Depero’s Radiophonic Lyrics—Francesca Bravi 15. A Vitalist Art: Filippo Tommaso Marinetti’s sintesi radiofoniche—Federico Luisetti Part III. Legacies 16. The End of an Avant-Garde? Marinetti and Futurism in World War I and its Aftermath—Walter L. Adamson 17. Futurism and the Politics of the Ugly: Theory, History and Actuality—Sascha Bru 18. Futurism and the Manifesto in the 1960s—Florian Mussgnug 19. No Man’s Land : From Free-word Tables to Verbal-visual Poetry—Teresa Spignoli 20. The Postwar Reception of Futurism: Repression or Recuperation?—Günter Berghaus About the Contributors Bibliography Index

The History of Futurism

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    A Hardback by Harald Hendrix, Monica Jansen

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 8/31/2012 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739173862, 978-0739173862
      ISBN10: 0739173863

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Futurism began as an artistic and social movement in early twentieth-century Italy. Until now, much of the scholarship available in English has focused only on a single individual or art form. This volume seeks to present a more complete picture of the movement by exploring the history of the movement, the events leading up to the movement, and the lasting impact it has had as well as the individuals involved in it. The History of Futurism: The Precursors, Protagonists, and Legacies addresses the history and legacy of what is generally seen as the founding avante-garde movement of the twentieth century. Geert Buelens, Harald Hendrix, and Monica Jansen have brought together scholarship from an international team of specialists to explore the Futurism movement as a multidisciplinary movement mixing aesthetics, politics, and science with a particular focus on the literature of the movement.

      Trade Review
      Among the many publications that have emerged for the centenary of Futurism, this stands out for breadth and originality, with an excellent mix of specific case studies and more general theoretical and historical discussions. The presence of some of the most important international scholars on the subject give extra weight and authority of this compelling collection. -- Pierpaolo Antonello, Head of Italian Department, University of Cambridge
      Bringing together leading scholars of Futurism from Europe and North America, The History of Futurism: Precursors, Protagonists, and Legacies aims at sketching a new and alternative map of the Italian movement, in which its debts and influences are properly acknowledged and in which supposedly minor figures such as Paolo Buzzi, Volt, or Rosa Rosà are given their rightful place next to F. T. Marinetti in shaping its aesthetics. There are many strengths that make this volume stand out in the increasingly crowded field of Futurist studies. The greatest is perhaps that, by tracing Futurism's roots in late-nineteenth-century poetics such as symbolism as well as its enduring legacy in the second half of the twentieth century, this book reminds us that Futurism was more than one of the many movements of the historical avant-garde: rather, it was one of the shaping forces of literary modernity. -- Luca Somigli, University of Toronto
      Was Futurism a dead end of modernism, or has it been an enduring inspiration? Was its ending already fated in its beginning, its adoption of late symbolist and decadent motifs? Or has it left a lasting legacy that continues to reverberate in the arts of today? This volume explores all those questions with probing insight and lively debate. Anyone interested in the arts of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries will treasure this collection of essays. -- Lawrence Rainey, University of York

      Table of Contents
      1. Futurisms: An Introduction—Geert Buelens and Monica Jansen 2. The Audacity of Hope: The Foundational Futurist Manifestos—Marjorie Perloff Part I. Precursors 3. The Anthology Poeti futuristi: Poetry of Transition—Davide Podavini 4. Marinetti in France between Symbolism and Futurism: Vers et prose and Les guêpes—Eleonora Conti 5. Futurist Roots in Palermo: Federico De Maria between Anticlassicism and Anti-Marinettism—Laura Greco 6. The Statistical Sublime—Jeffrey T. Schnapp 7. Mapping Futurism. Performance in Rome and Across Italy, 1909-1915, with a Coda on Interwar Calabria—Patricia Gaborik Part II. Protagonists 8. Time and Space in the Writings of Marinetti, Palazzeschi, the Group of L’Italia futurista, and Other Futurist Writers—Beatrice Sica 9. The Great War in the Words-in-Freedom Style of an Atypical Futurist: Conflagrazione by Paolo Buzzi—Monica Biasiolo 10. How to Become a Women of the Future: Una donna con tre anime—Un ventre di donna—Silvia Contarini 11. Love, Politics, and an Explosive Future: Volt’s La fine del mondo—Kyle Hall 12. Auto-commentary in Ardengo Soffici’s BIF$ZF+18. Simultaneità e chimismi lirici—Dirk Vanden Berghe 13. Luciano Folgore’s Self-parody: End or Renewal of Futurism?—Stefano Magni 14. Fortunato Depero’s Radiophonic Lyrics—Francesca Bravi 15. A Vitalist Art: Filippo Tommaso Marinetti’s sintesi radiofoniche—Federico Luisetti Part III. Legacies 16. The End of an Avant-Garde? Marinetti and Futurism in World War I and its Aftermath—Walter L. Adamson 17. Futurism and the Politics of the Ugly: Theory, History and Actuality—Sascha Bru 18. Futurism and the Manifesto in the 1960s—Florian Mussgnug 19. No Man’s Land : From Free-word Tables to Verbal-visual Poetry—Teresa Spignoli 20. The Postwar Reception of Futurism: Repression or Recuperation?—Günter Berghaus About the Contributors Bibliography Index

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