"Some Ovid of the Films": W. B. Yeats, Mass Media, and the Future of Poetry in the 1930s release_p7pvuqfcxbemzm6j7hvthm32vy

by Charles I. Armstrong

Published in International Yeats Studies by Clemson University.

2018   p49-63

Abstract

This essay addresses Yeats's negotiation of poetry's relationship, during the 1930s, with the emerging mass culture. Rather than contextualizing Yeats's view on the future with a traditional critical framework such as Romantic apocalyptical discourse, a closeness to Aldous Huxley's Brave New World and dystopian novels is explored. The main focus is on an unfinished draft for A Vision, "Michael Robartes Foretells," and the way it envisages the changing situation for literature at the end of an epoch. Yeats's use of classical parallels and linking of poetry and cinema are given special attention. His suggestion that the poetry of the future may be affected by the emergent medium of cinema provides an ambivalent perspective, not simply suggesting the degeneration of poetry in a context of Americanized mass culture but also possibilities of metamorphosis and spirituality. The interpretation of "Michael Robartes Foretells" is framed by other examples of Yeats's engagement with mass media in the 1930s, in the form of Virginia Woolf's diary report of table talk and Yeats's radio broadcasts. All in all, Yeats's view on poetry's position balances between a conservative fear of marginalization and a more hopeful view of its potential to reinvent itself in a new historical context.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf  143.6 kB
file_26wgchx3pfc3nhr6wolidhsxy4
tigerprints.clemson.edu (web)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Date   2018-11-01
Language   en ?
Journal Metadata
Not in DOAJ
Not in Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  2475-9627
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: 522fce15-e9ee-4790-8241-414a268a7c1d
API URL: JSON