Peter Brooker: General Introduction: Modernity, modernism,
magazines
France
Peter Brooker: Introduction
1: Diana Schiau Botea: Performing writing: Le Chat Noir (1881-95),
Le Courrier français (1884-1913), Gil Blas illustré (1891-1903),
Les Quat'z'arts (1897-8)
2: Alexia Kalantzis: The 'little magazine' as publishing success :
Le Scapin (1885-6), La Pleiade (1886-90), Le Mercure de France
(1890-1965)
3: Elisa Grilli and Evanghelia Stead: Between symbolism and
avant-garde poetics: La Plume (1889-1905), L'Ermitage (1890-1906),
and La Revue blanche (1890-1905)
4: Anne-Rachel Hermetet: Modern classicism: La Nouvelle Revue
française (1909-43) and Commerce (1924-32)
5: Willard Bohn: Apollinaire and 'the new spirit': Le Festin
d'Esope (1903), Les Soirées de Paris (1912 -June 1913; Nov. 1913-
July 1914), L'élan (1915-Feb 1916; Dec.1916)
6: Simon Dell: After Apollinaire: SIC (1916-19), Nord-Sud (1917-18)
and L'Esprit Nouveau (1920-5)
7: David Hopkins: Proto-Dada. The New York connection: The
Ridgefield Gazook (1915), The Blind Man (1917), Rongwrong (1917),
391 (1917), TNT (1919), New York Dada (1921)
8: Ruth Hemus: A Dada Season: 391 (1919-24), Cannibale (1920),
Projecteur (1920), Dada (1920-1), Le Coeur à Barbe (1922)
9: John Attridge: Eclecticism and its discontents: Les Ecrits
nouveaux (1917-22) and La Revue européenne (1923-31)
10: Raymond Spiteri: 'Que faire les surréalistes?': Littérature
(1919-24), La Révolution surréaliste, (1925-9), Le Surréalisme au
service de la révolution, (1930-3)
11: Eric Robertson: 'A shameless, indecent saintliness': Georges
Bataille, Documents (1929-31), and Acéphale (1936-9)
12: Jed Rasula: Dangerous games and new mythologies: Cercle et
Carré (1930), Art Concret (1930), Abstraction-Création (1932-5);
Minotaure (1933-9)
The Low Countries
Sascha Bru: Introduction
13: Sascha Bru: 'The will to style': the Dutch contribution to the
avant-garde: Leiden: De Stijl (1917-32), Mécano (1922-3),
Amsterdam: Wendingen (1918-32), i10 (1927-9), Groningen: The Next
Call (1923-6)
14: Daphné de Marneffe: Antwerp circles.Languages, locality, and
internationalism: Ontwaking (1896, 1901-1910), De Boomgaard
(1909-11), Résurrection (1917-18), Het Roode Zeil (1920), Sélection
(1920-33), Ruimte (1920-1), Het Overzicht (1921-5), De Driehoek
(1925-6), Lumière (1919-23), Ça Ira (1920-3)
15: Francis Mus and Hans Vandevoorde: 'Streetscape of new districts
permeated by the fresh scent of cement'. Brussels, the avant-garde,
and internationalism: La Jeune Belgique (1881-7), Van Nu en Straks
(1893-1901), L'Art libre (1919-22), Le Disque Vert (1922-5),
Variétés (1928-30), 7 Arts (1922-8)
Spain and Portugal
Peter Brooker: Introduction
16: Lori Cole: Madrid. Questioning the avant-garde: Helios
(1903-4), El Nuevo Mercurio (1907), Prometeo (1908-12), Los
Quijotes (1915-18), Cosmópolis (1919-1922), Grecia (1918-20), Ultra
(1921-2), Ambos (1923), Litoral (1926-7,1929), Mediodía (1926-9),
Carmen y Lola (1927-9), La Gaceta Literaria (1927-32), and Gallo
(1928).
17: Geoff West: 'Noucentisme' and the avant-garde in Barcelona
(1916-36) : La Revista. Quaderns de publicació quinzenal (1915-36)
Vell i nou. Revista d'art (1915-19, 1920-1), Revista nova (1914,
1916-17), 391 (1917), Troços (1916, 1917-18) ; L'Instant. Revue
franco-catalane d'art et littérature (1918-19), Un enemic del poble
(1917-19), Arc-voltaic (1918), Proa (1921), L'Amic de les
arts (1926-8), Hèlix (1929-30), A.C. Documentos de actividad
contemporánea (1931-7), D'ací i d'allà (1918-36).
18: Clara Rocha: Modernist magazines in Portugal. Orpheu and its
legacy: Orpheu (1915), Exílio (1916), Centauro (1916), Portugal
Futurista (1917), Contemporânea (1915, 1922-6), Athena (1924-5),
Sudoeste (1935), Presença (1927-38; 1939-40).
Italy
Sascha Bru (MDRN): Introduction
19: Francesca Billiani: Political and aesthetic transgressions.
Florentine reviews à la mode: Il Marzocco (1896-1932), Il Regno
(1903-5), Il Leonardo (1903-7), Hermes (1904), and La Voce
(1908-14)
20: Luca Somigli: Past-loving Florence and the temptations of
futurism: Lacerba (1913-15), Quartiere Latino (1913-14), L'Italia
futurista (1916-18), La Vraie Italie (1919-20)
21: Mariana Aguirre: The return to order in Florence: Il Selvaggio
(1924-43), Il Frontespizio (1929-40), Pègaso (1929-33), Campo di
Marte (1938-9)
22: Eric Bulson: Milan, the 'rivista', and the de-provincialization
of Italy: Le Papyrus (1894-6), Poesia (1905-09), Il Convegno
(1920-40), Pan (1933-5), Corrente di vita giovanile (1938-40)
23: Vivien Greene: Bizantium and emporium: fine-secolo magazines in
Rome and Milan: Fanfulla della Domenica (1879-1919), Cronaca
Bizantina (1881-6), Il Convito (1895-1907), Cronaca d'Arte
(1890-2), Vita Moderna (1892-5), Emporium (1895-1964)
24: Chris Michaelides: Futurist Periodicals in Rome (1916-39). From
effervescence to disillusionment: Avanscoperta (1916-17), Cronache
d'attualità (1916-22), Noi (1917-25), Roma futurista (1918-20),
Dinamo: Rivista futurista (1919), Le Futurisme (1922-31), La Ruota
dentata (1927), 2000 Giornale della rivoluzione artistica (1929),
Futurismo (May 1932- Nov. 1933), Sant'Elia (Oct. 1933-Sept.
1934),
Artecrazia (Oct. 1934- Jan. 1939).
25: Arianna Bove: 'The old was dying but the new could not be
born'. Revolutionary magazines in Turin: Energie Nuove (1918-20),
L'Ordine Nuovo (1919-20), Rivoluzione Liberale (1922-4), Il Baretti
(1924-6)
Scandinavia
Peter Brooker: Introduction
26: Bjarne Søndergaard Bendtsen: Copenhagen. From the ivory tower
to street activism: Ny Jord (1888-9), Taarnet (1893-4), Ungt Blod
(1895-6), Vagten (1899-1900); Klingen (1917-20); Kværnen (1920),
Buen (1924-25), Sirius (1924-25), Kritisk Revy (1926-8); Baalet
(1921-2), Bjerget (1923), Pressen (1923-4), I Morgen (1925,1927);
Clarté (1926-7),
Monde (1928-31); linien (1934-9), konkretion (1935-6)
27: Eirik Vassenden: Norway. The Province and its Metropolites:
Impressionisten (1886-90), Exlex (1919-20), PLAN (1933-6)
28: Mats Jansson: Crossing borders. Modernism in Sweden and the
Swedish-speaking part of Finland: Thalia (1909-13), Ny konst
(1915), flamman (1917-21), Ultra (1922), Quosego (1928-9), kontakt
(1931), Spektrum (1931-3) and Karavan (1934-5).
Germany, Austria, Switzerland
Christian Weikop: Introduction
29: Timothy W. Hiles: Reality and utopia in Munich's premier
magazines: Simplicissimus (1896-1944) and Jugend (1896-1940).
30: Jessica Horsley: 'There you have Munich': Der Blaue Reiter
(1912), Revolution (1913), Der Weg (1919)
31: Andreas Kramer: Between art and activism: Pan (1895-1900;
1910-15), Die weissen Blätter (1913-21), Das neue Pathos (1913-19);
Marsyas (1917-19)
32: Douglas Brent McBride: A critical mass for modernism in Berlin:
Der Sturm (1910-1932), Die Aktion (1911-1932), Sturm-Bühne
(1918-1919)
33: Christian Weikop: Transitions: from Expressionism to Dada: Neue
Jugend (1914; 1916-17), Die freie Strasse (1915-18), Club Dada
(1918)
34: Christian Weikop: Berlin Dada and the carnivalesque: Jedermann
sein eigner Fussball (1919) and Der Dada (1919-20)
35: Sabine T. Kriebel: Radical left magazines in Berlin: Die Pleite
(1919, 1923-4); Der blutige Ernst (1919); Der Gegner (1919-22); Der
Knüppel (1923-7); Eulenspiegel (1928-31); AIZ/VI (1924-38)
36: Stephen Bury: 'Not to adorn life but to organize it': Veshch.
Gegenstand. Objet: Revue internationale de l'art moderne (1922), G
(1923-6)
37: Erika Esau: 'The magazine of enduring value': Der Querschnitt
(1921-36) in context
38: Kathleen Chapman: Dresden. 'Collectivity is dead, long live
mankind': Der Komet (1918-19), Menschen (1918-21), Neue Blätter für
Kunst und Dichtung (1918-21)
39: Timothy O. Benson: Hamburg and Kiel: Radical Bildungsbürgertum:
Die Schöne Rarität (1917-1919), Die Rote Erde (1919-1923), Der
Sturmreiter (1919-1920), Kündung
40: Lynette Roth: Cologne.The magazine as artistic and social
imperative:Der Ventilator (1919); Bulletin D (1919); Die Schammade
(1920); Stupid (1920); a bis z (1929-33)
41: Dorothea Dietrich: Hannover. 'True art' and 'true DADA': Das
Hohe Ufer (1919-20), Der Zweemann (1919-20), Der Marstall (1920),
and Merz (1923-32)
42: Patrick Rössler: Frankfurt, Leipzig, and Dessau. 'neue
typographie' - the new face of a new world: das neue frankfurt and
die neue linie
43: Diane Silverthorne: Vienna's 'Holy Spring' and beyond: Ver
Sacrum (1898-1903), Almanach der Wiener Werkstätte (1911), Hohe
Warte (1904-9), Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration (1897-1932)
44: Edward Timms: From the Hapsburg Empire to the Holocaust: Die
Fackel (1899-1936) and Der Brenner (1910-54)
45: Debbie Lewer: The avant-garde in Swiss exile 1914-20: Der
Mistral (1915), Sirius (1915-16), Cabaret Voltaire (1916), Dada
(1917-19), 391 (No. 8, 1918), Der Zeltweg (1919), Almanach der
Freien Zeitung (1918).
East-Central Europe
Peter Brooker: Introduction
46: Nicholas Sawicki: The view from Prague: Moderní revue
(1894-1925), Volné sm%ery (1896-1949), Um%elecký m%esí%cník
(1911-4), Revolu%cní sborník Dev%etsil (1922), %Zivot (1923), Disk
(1923-5), Pásmo (1924-6), ReD (1927-31)
47: Laurel Seely and Tyrus Miller: Avant-garde journals in the
Yugoslav crucible: Zenit (Zagreb 1921-3; Belgrade 1924-6); Zagreb:
Dada-Jok (1922), Dada-Tank (1922), Dada Jazz (1922); Novi Sad: Út
(1922-5); Ljubljana: Svetokret (1921), Rde%ci pilot (1922), Tank
(1927)
48: Éva Forgács and Tyrus Miller: The avant-garde in Budapest and
in exile in Vienna: A Tett (1915-6), Ma (Budapest 1916-9; Vienna
1920-6), Egység (1922-4), Akasztott Ember (1922), 2x2 (1922), Ék
(1923-4), Is (1924), 365 (1925), Dokumentum (1926-7), RIMunka
(1928-39).
49: Irina Livezeanu: Romania. 'Windows toward the West': new forms
and the 'poetry of true life'. Revista celor l'alti (1908), Insula
(1912), Chemarea (1912), Contimporanul (1922-32), 75 HP (1924),
Punct (1924-5 ), Integral (1925-8), Urmuz ( 1925 ), Unu
(1928-33)
50: Przemyslaw Strozek: Kraków and Warsaw. Becoming the
avant-garde: Rydwan (first series 1912-14), Maski (1918-19), Wianki
(1919-22), Formi'sci (1919-21), Nowa Sztuka (1921-2), Zwrotnica
(1922-3), Blok (1924-6)
51: Lidia Gluchowska: Poznan and Lódz. Nationalist modernism and
the international avant-garde: Zdrój (1917-22); Ing-Idysz (Jung
Idysz) (1919), Tel-Awiw (1919-21)
Russia, the Soviet Union, and Ukraine
Peter Brooker: Introduction
52: Christina Lodder with Peter Hellyer: St. Petersburg /
Petrograd/ Leningrad. From aesthetes to revolutionaries: Mir
Iskusstva (1898-1904), Apollon (1909-17), Studiya Impressionistov
(1910), Soyuz Molodezhii (1912-13), Iskusstvo Kommuny (1918-19)
53: Oleg Minin: Modernism upheld. Moscow journals of art and
literature: Vesy (1904-9), Iskusstvo (1905), Zolotoe Runo (1906-9),
and Mákovets (1922).
54: Christina Lodder: From futurist iconoclasm to socialist
construction: Futuristy. Pervyi zhurnal russkikh futuristov (1914),
Lef: Levyi front iskusstv (1923-5), Novyi Lef (1927-8),
Internationatsional'naya literature (1933-45)
55: Emily Finer: 'A rift on the left front': Lef (1923-5) and Na
postu (1923-5)
56: Oleh S. Ilnytzkyj: Under imperial eyes in Kyiv and Kharkiv
magazines: Ukrains'ka khata (1909-14), Muzahet (1919), Mystetstvo
(1919), Katafalk iskusstva (1922), Semafor u maibutnie (1922), Honh
komunkul'ta (1924), Nova generatsiia (1927-30), Avangard: Al'manakh
proletars'kykh myttsiv Novoi generatsii (1930).
Peter Brooker is Emeritus Professor in the Department of Culture,
Film and Media, the University of Nottingham. He has written widely
on contemporary writing, theory, and film is the author of Bertolt
Brecht: Dialectics, Poetry, Politics (1989), New York Fictions
(1996), Modernity and Metropolis (2004), Bohemia in London (2004,
2007) and A Glossary of Cultural Theory (1999, 2002). He has
co-edited The Geographies of
Modernism (2005), and was Co-Director of the AHRC funded Modernist
Magazine Project (2005-2010). Most recently he is co-editor of
Vols. 1 and 2 of The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of
Modernist Magazines (2009) and of The Oxford Handbook of
Modernisms (2010). He was a Professorial Fellow at the Centre for
Modernist Studies at the University of Sussex (2008-10) and a
Visiting Professor at the University of Birmingham (2009). He
served between 2005 -2011 as Chair of the Raymond Williams
Society.
Sascha Bru (MDRN) is Professor of literary theory at the University
of Leuven. He has written extensively on the poetics and politics
of the modernist avant-gardes, including Democracy, Law and the
Modernist Avant-Gardes: Writing in the State of Exception (2009)
and the co-edited volumes, The Invention of Politics in the
European Avant-Garde - 1906-1940 (2006), Europa! Europa? The
Avant-Garde, Modernism and the Fate of a Continent (2009) and
Regarding the Popular:
High and Low Culture in Modernism and the Avant-Garde (2011). He is
a founder of EAM (The European Network for Avant-Garde and
Modernist Studies)
Andrew Thacker is currently Professor of Twentieth Century
Literature and Director of the Centre for Textual Studies at De
Montfort University, Leicester. He co-founded the Northern
Modernism seminar and is an editor of the journal Literature &
History. He has published widely upon modernism, including Moving
Through Modernity: Space and Geography in Modernism (2003), The
Imagist Poets (2011), and the co-edited The Oxford Handbook of
Modernisms (2010). He
is currently Chair of the British Association for Modernist
Studies.
Christian Weikop is Chancellor's Fellow in the History of Art at
the University of Edinburgh and has held research fellowships in
the United Kingdom, United States, and Germany. He has written
widely on twentieth-century German art for international art
journals and museum publications, as well as for the projects
ARTIST ROOMS (Tate/National Galleries of Scotland) and the Image of
the Black in Western Art series (Harvard University). He is editor
of the volume New Perspectives on
Brücke Expressionism: Bridging History (2011) and founder of the
Research Forum for German Visual Culture at the University of
Edinburgh.
`Review from previous edition a pioneering three-volume survey...
gives a masterly overview of the period as well as authoritative
potted studies of a host of individual journals'
Hugh Haughton, Literary Review
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