Free as gods

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"Among many art, music and literature lovers, particularly devotees of modernism, the expatriate community in France during the Jazz Age represents a remarkable convergence of genius in one place and period—one of the most glorious in history. Drawn by the presence of such avant-garde figures as Joyce and Picasso, artists and writers fled the Prohibition in the United States and revolution in Russia to head for the free-wheeling scene in Paris, where they made contact with rivals, collaborators, and a sophisticated audience of collectors and patrons. The outpouring of boundary-pushing novels, paintings, ballets, music, and design was so profuse that it belies the brevity of the era (1918–1929). Drawing on unpublished albums, drawings, paintings, and manuscripts, Charles A. Riley offers a fresh examination of both canonic and overlooked writers and artists and their works, by revealing them in conversation with one another. He illuminates social interconnections and artistic collaborations among the most famous—Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Gershwin, Diaghilev, and Picasso—and goes a step further, setting their work alongside that of African Americans such as Sidney Bechet, Archibald Motley Jr., and Langston Hughes, and women such as Gertrude Stein and Nancy Cunard. Riley’s biographical and interpretive celebration of the many masterpieces of this remarkable group shows how the creative community of postwar Paris supported astounding experiments in content and form that still resonate today." -- Publisher's description.

Title Free as gods : how the Jazz Age reinvented modernism / Charles A. Riley II.
Publisher Lebanon, New Hampshire : ForeEdge
Creation Date 2017
Notes Includes bibliographical references and index.
Content Part I. Freedom: anything goes. Enter the ballets russes
One of those fabulous flights: Cole Porter
Stairway to paradise: George Gershwin
Inevitable Paris beckoned: John Dos Passos and e.e cummings
Dancing on dynamite: Nancy Cunard
From flappers to philosophers: F. Scott Fitzgerald
New amazements: Hart Crane
Weary bluesman: Langston Hughes
Making it in the Paris art world – Part II. Order: blesses rage. Existential octaves: Ernest Ansermet
Geometry and gods, side by side: Le Corusier
Connoisseur of the contrasts: Fernand Leger
Transfigurations of the commonplace: Gerald Murphy
Prophet of disorder: Oswald Spengler – Part III. Truth: the truest sentence. The truth in paining: Pablo Picasso
Words in a strange language: Archibald MacLeish
The malady of language: Eugene Jolas
The real thing: Ernest Hemingway.
Extent 1 online resource (pages cm)
Language English
Copyright Date ©2017
National Library system number 997012141172705171
MARC RECORDS

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