Universität Duisburg – Essen, SoSe 05
Seminar: The Roaring Twenties
An introduction to Imagism
by
Joan-Ivonne Bake
Index
1 INTRODUCTION 3
2 THE ORIGINS OF IMAGISM 4
2.1 IMAGISM AND SYMBOLISM 4
2.2 OTHER INFLUENCES 6
3 WHAT IS IMAGISM 9
4 INTERPRETATION OF “THE GREAT FIGURE” 13
5 CONCLUSION 17
6 BIBLIOGRAPHY 19
1 Introduction
In line with the seminar “The Roaring Twenties” by Anika Wassilowsky, I took a closer look at Imagism and its characteristic features and also at some of the most important Imagists, their ideals and main ideas of this literary epoch.
The first chapter deals with the origins of Imagism and describes where the Imagist got their creeds from and why they would have them. The second article is based on the master essay which was written together with Marie-Christin Miebach, Beate Steindor, Mira Rick and Beate Wrobel for the final reader of the seminar. It is picturing the characteristic features and the distinctive properties of the Imagist period. It deals with the question “What is Imagism?”, describing the goals of a movement in poetry that flourished in Britain and the United States in the 1920s.
The last chapter attends to a short interpretation of the Imagist poem “The great figure” (1920) by the American poet William Carlos Williams. In addition to this interpretation I will dwell on the interrelation of this poem and a picture by Charles Demuth which is called “I saw the Figure Five in Gold”. This one was painted in 1928 and is obviously a work which was inspired by the poem of Williams. A conclusion in the end will summarize all the important facts and special features of Imagism.
2 The origins of Imagism
“We are faced with the trite but startling fact
that nothing is as new as it appears at first to be.”1
The origins of Imagism lead us back very far into the beginnings of poetry. Like nearly all literary movements, Imagism was a response to the immediate past of poetry, in particular the poetry of England and America. There were at least two chronological sources: the modern and the ancient. The ancient literatures from Greek, Latin, Hebrew, Chinese, and Japanese contributed to the ideals of Imagism just like the modern influence from France. Of course not each poet was affected by the same literatures; every poet had a specific influence and was an individual product of singular combinations of sources. In the result of these diverse origins there wasn’t such a jumble as might be thought:
“It was a harmonious structure, for the simple reason that its
elements were not superficial but basic, not regional but
universal. Harness of outline, clarity of image, brevity,
suggestiveness, freedom from metrical laws – these and other
imagist ideals could be drawn from Greek as well as from Hebrew
or Chinese.”2
2.1 Imagism and Symbolism
Imagism or Imagisme, as it would be initially called, was a successor to the earlier French Symbolism with famous poets such as Charles Baudelaire and Stéphane Mallarmé. But whereas Symbolism had an affinity with music, Imagism sought analogy with the visual arts. Vorticism, a later kind of Imagism-for-elites-only, would still go further and identify itself with painterly terms. Symbolism was a literary movement which arose in France during the end of the 19th century. It started around 1890 and ended round about 1920. Symbolists were especially against Naturalism and aspired room for new development. While Naturalistic poets tried to describe their social environment as accurately as possible, Symbolists were not interested in describing social truth. They didn’t want to give detailed descriptions like Realists or Naturalists and they wouldn’t try to change the social truth, but they wanted to create an ideal-aesthetic world within their works. In contrast to Romanticism and Impressionism, Symbolism was neither about picturing personal emotions nor about declaring subjective reactions on external circumstances. Symbolist poets tried to form a world of beauty by putting pieces in form of symbols and allegories together. Symbolists disputed objective presentability and recognisability of reality, that’s why they never used direct descriptions for things or higher senses.3
[...]
1 Hughes 1960, p. 3
2 Hughes 1960, p. 4
3 http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolismus_%28Literatur%29
Arbeit zitieren:
Joan-Ivonne Bake, 2006, An introduction to Imagism, München, GRIN Verlag GmbH
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