Part of the Climate: American Cubist Poetry
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About this ebook
Jacqueline Vaught Brogan has assembled this much needed collection of experimental verse from the interwar years by going to the small magazines through which the poems reached their public. She not only shows how significantly many of these American poets of the early twentieth century were influenced by the aesthetic development of cubism in the visual arts but also argues that the cubist aesthetic, at least as it translated into the verbal domain, invariably involved political and ethical issues. The most important of these concerns was to extend the aesthetic revolution of cubism into a genuine "revolution of the word."
Brogan maintains, in fact, that the multiplicity inherent in cubism anticipates the deconstructive enterprise now seen in criticism itself. With this history of the cubist movement in American verse, she raises serious questions about the politics of canonization and asks us to consider the ethical responsibility of interpretation, both in the creative arts and in critical texts.
Part of the Climate convincingly redefines American modernist poetry in light of developments in modern painting, particularly cubism. The traditional separation of the verbal and visual arts is cast aside here, as Brogan encourages a re-evaluation
Jacqueline Vaught Brogan
Jacqueline Vaught Brogan is Associate Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame and the author of Stevens and Simile: A Theory of Language.
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Part of the Climate - Jacqueline Vaught Brogan
PART OF THE CLIMATE
PART OF THE CLIMATE American Cubist Poetry
Jacqueline Vaught Brogan
University of California Press
Berkeley Los Angeles Oxford
University of California Press
Berkeley and Los Angeles, California
University of California Press
Oxford, England
Copyright © 1991 by The Regents of the University of California
Library of Congress Cataloging in-Publication Data
Brogan, Jacqueline Vaught, 1952-
Part of the climate: cubism and twentieth-century American poetry / Jacqueline Vaught Brogan.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 0-520-06848-3 (alk. paper)
I. American poetry—20th century—History and criticism. 2. Art and literature —United States —History—20th century. 3. Cubism and literature —United States. I. Title PS310.A76B7 1990 90-34743
811’.5209I — dc20 CIP
Printed in the United States of America
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences —Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984
This book is a print-on-demand volume. It is manufactured using toner in place of ink. Type and images may be less sharp than the same material seen in traditionally printed University of California Press editions.
Contents
Contents 1
Contents 1
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 The KINDLING BREATH
of the 1910s
CAMERA WORK
Pablo Picasso
(Untitled)
ROGUE
Aux Galeries Lafayette
Three Moments in Paris
291
Flip-Flap
OTHERS
Lento
Metric Figure
Rapière à Deux Points
Later Songs
Excerpts from Songs to Joannes
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
Steel Town
SOIL
Primordio
2 The REVOLUTION
of the Early 1920s
THE LITTLE REVIEW
Nuances of a Theme by Williams
Buddha
Excerpt from Anglo-Mongrels and the Rose
THE REVOLUTION
OF THE EARLY 1920s
THE DIAL
Buffalo Bills
Dorothy
II
THE MEASURE
New England Verses
Notes for an Epilogue
BROOM
If You Had Three Husbands
Sunset
Three Portraits
Discourse in a Cantina at Havana
Four Poems
Four Poems
SECESSION
Day Coach
Poem
The Hothouse Plant
this evangelist
3 THE PREDOMINANT FORCE
of the Late 1920s to Early 1930s
THE EXILE
Poem Beginning The
Part of Canto XXIII
Excerpt from The Descent of Winter
TRANSITION
Bison
HOUND & HORN
The Great Experiment
Rain
In the ‘Sconset Bus
BLUES
Group
Sonnet
Poem
Frustrations: Four from Tension
George Hugnet
Antipodes
Meek Madness in Capri or Suicide for Effect
Poem to F. M.
THE MOON—
Are Poems
Tibor Serly
PAGANY
Poem
Five Words In a Line
Into the Shandy Westemess
Is Pleasure
Snow-Ghost
Dream of the Erotic
Enfances
4 The WANING OF CUBISM in the Late 1930s to Early 1940s
CONTACT
TREND
NEW DIRECTIONS
A Thought Revolved
FURIOSO
VIEW
Conclusion
Appendix
Editorial
American Art
On The Right, Ladies and Gentlemen…
Syrinx.
Notes
Select Bibliography for Further Reading
Index
Preface
Because Bob Coady is dead there is nothing to be hoped for of just the unique spirit that made The Soil so brilliantly provocative of new art forms and of controversial opinions about them. The Soil was first cousin to the free-verse movement in America which crystallized in Alfred Kreymborgs group of Others. That was a magic moment. No one who was touched by the kindling breath will ever forget the joy of it nor cease to regret that a great fiery wind devoured it. It will be worth while some day to review that frail but vital page in literary history.
ROBERT ALDEN SANBORN A Champion in the Wilderness,
Broom 3, 3 (Oct. 1922), 174-5
While Robert Sanborn obviously thought the kindling breath
in modern literary history had been extinguished by 1922, the energy driving the creation and publication of a new kind of poetry—what I am here calling cubist poetry
—was still extending itself not only in America but throughout Europe as well. Far from being simply a free verse
movement, cubist poetry, at least in the United States, developed specifically in response to exhibitions and reproductions of various cubist paintings and drawings, as well as through continued interaction with a number of cubist painters. Eventually, this new aesthetic would influence virtually every major American poet in this century, so that this magic moment
marks not the end but rather the beginning of a critical phase in modernism which indeed proves to be a vital page in literary history.
While other critics may argue that some other aesthetic movement such as futurism or expressionism best defines the modernist movement or, perhaps, best defines the twentieth-century mentality in general, I agree that cubism is still today the greatest single aesthetic achievement of the century,
¹ one that revolutionized cinematography, drama, prose, and poetry, as well as painting and sculpture. As Henry Sayre says, cubism is the movement that began everything in the first place,
² a remark that can be extended to the verbal arts of this century as well as to the visual. Rather than having ended in 1922, when Sanborn lamented the passing of this phase of literary history, the effect of cubism on twentieth-century poetry spread over the next decade and continues to be felt today, most obviously in the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poets, but also in the continued work of such poets as Louis Zukofsky and George Oppen. Nonetheless, cubist poetry may have reached its zenith in the late 1920s and early 1930s in the poetry published in such American journals as Blues and Pagany and in their European counterparts such as transition. In fact, as a specific movement, the force of cubism in poetry appears to have waned dramatically during the Second World War, as many artists, poets, and editors previously interested in cubism responded to the horrors of another global war by turning, in an aesthetic gesture, to surrealism or expressionism. Charles Henri Ford, for example, who had earlier edited Blues (ajournai prominent here), founded View in the early 1940s as yet another avant-garde magazine concerned with modern visual and verbal aesthetics. Rapidly, however, as the Second World War progressed, the magazine became more exclusively surrealistic, then almost sadistic in some respects, when, for example, it introduced a Children’s Page
no child should see.
The cubist moment (if we can call it that) has in its verbal form a particular historical constraint and context — that is, the brackets formed by the two world wars. While it may be purely an accident that Picasso would develop cubist techniques in painting (techniques which were rather quickly recognized as corresponding to the fragmented, postwar mentality) before the Great War began, it is historically and even politically no accident that cubism in literature largely falls between the Great War (appropriately renamed, in a kind of cubist twisting of perspective, with a number) and World War II. In literature, and in poetry in particular, the cubist moment epitomizes a political moment which at once represents and ironically critiques the growing sense of discontinuity which seems to have become almost universal during this period. In this regard, it is especially interesting to note that in his 1930 essay, Picasso’s Method,
A. Hyatt Mayor simply assumes his readers’ recognition of the artist’s uncanny prescience
in developing cubism, which he further describes as having "flaired, in 1907 or so, the jangled nerves of after the war" (italics mine). Mayor goes on to observe that
Picasso was abandoning his post war
mood even before the war had ended. Just as he anticipated that chaos by a number of years, so he anticipated the present reorganization, the new classicism that is now busying the freshest minds.³
If there was a sense of present reorganization
in the first year of that decade, it was almost immediately shattered in America and in Europe by the economic crisis begun on Wall Street the preceding October (a crisis that would continue to be felt, in great extremities, through 1933) and, then, by a growing dis-ease, as the inevitability of another world war began to prey on the modern consciousness. Thus Mayor’s description of Picasso’s uncanny prescience
is apropos of the entire interim war period, for cubism—ironically an artistic movement initially concerned with form—rapidly evolved into a movement which characteristically fractured form and, by extension, all traditional ways of ordering and rendering the world as intelligible. And it is precisely this sense of fracturing, fragmentation, even chaos that comes to be expressed in some of the most famous literature written between the wars, such as William Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury or T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land,
It is not without significance that, however unintentionally, the uncanny prescience
of cubist techniques had a specific manifestation in the Great War itself. As Stephen Kern has recently pointed out, the man who created camouflage for the French troops during the middle of this war—a creation necessitated by the fact that traditional military dress had become virtually suicidal,
given the new, long-range weaponry— knew of Picasso’s work and used cubist techniques in the making of camouflage:⁴
In order to totally deform objects, I employed the means Cubists used to represent them —later this permitted me, without giving reasons, to hire in my [camouflage] section some painters, who, because of their very special vision, had an aptitude for denaturing any kind of form whatsoever, (emphasis added)
Kern has even argued that the Great War itself may be most accurately understood as the Cubist War, one in which the broken trench lines, for example, are metonymous for the inadequacy of older traditions—even the tradition of the heroic front line in battle—in the modern world. It is almost chilling that Gertrude Stein reports that Picasso’s response to first seeing a camouflaged truck was to cry out, yes it is we who made it, that is cubism.
⁵
The dramatic change in the world’s mentality which this connection between visual cubism and the Great War suggests, however, was not largely expressed—with a few notable exceptions—in American poetry until after the war, with the widespread disillusionment
of the postwar period and a concurrent, impassioned interest in social reform. The force of cubism in American poetry thus does not reach its zenith until the late 1920s and early 1930s, though as a force it may well have its earliest expressions in many of the first works reprinted here. Together, they trace at least in part the critical development of an American cubist poetics. This collection, which is intended to add to our understanding of the poetic climate in which such famous poets as William Carlos Williams, E. E. Cummings, and Wallace Stevens first began practicing their verse, potentially offers new insights into the nature of modernism
itself by challenging the presumption of a Pounds Williams tradition from which Stevens, among others, is notably excluded. The various poems collected in this volume suggest a way of seeing
such diverse poets, at least in the early years, as responding to (and as responsive to) the same climate and, consequently, they suggest the need for further exploration into both why and when such poets eventually diverge.
For example, although in his 1951 essay, The Relations between Poetry and Painting,
Stevens would distinguish between two classes
of modern poetry—one that is modern in respect to what it says, the other that is modern in respect to form
⁶ — in the early stages of his career, Stevens does experiment with modern form,
at least in a minimal way, precisely when he is producing his own cubist poems. The point at which he rejects cubist experimentation (although, I would argue, he never rejects it entirely) seems, ironically, to correspond with a loss of faith in the power of this new aesthetic to discover an undisclosed order in the chaos of the modern world.⁷ As Sayre has argued, cubism (and also expressionism and surrealism in both visual and verbal forms) is informed by the sense that in the abstract lay a revelation of order which might unify the chaos of modernity.
⁸ In the verbal realm at least, however, cubism largely fails to create such a new order, and Stevens’ subsequent recourse to an inner resistance
to the increasing violence of reality may have been prompted by far more social awareness (and even purpose) than he is usually credited with having. Conversely, Pound’s continued preoccupation with the material form of poetry — including the effects of verbal collage in The Cantos or Homage to Sextus Propertius
—signals with even greater irony a particular idealismi a more enduring faith in the power of the word to have actual social and political consequences.⁹ Yet for all their differences, it is obvious that both Pound and Stevens agree that the modern stage
has changed utterly in the twentieth century, as they clarify in Hugh Selwyn Mauberly
and Of Modern Poetry,
respectively.¹⁰
That the stage —or the climate, as it were—did indeed change around the beginning of the Great War, with ramifications that extend well into poetic expressions, is made painfully clear if we consider the difference between T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, published after the war, and Madison Cawein’s far more nostalgic Waste Land,
published in Poetry, one year before the Great War began:
Waste Land
Briar and fennel and chincapin,
And rue and ragweed everywhere;
The field seemed sick as a soul with sin,
Or dead of an old despair, Born of an ancient care.
The cricket’s cry and the locust’s whirr,
And the note of a bird’s distress,
With the rasping sound of the grasshopper,
Clung to the loneliness
Like burrs to a trailing dress.
So sad the field, so waste the ground,
So curst with an old despair,
A woodchuck’s burrow, a blind mole’s mound,
And a chipmunk’s stony lair,
Seemed more than it could bear.
So lonely, too, so more than sad,
So droning-lone with bees—
I wondered what more could Nature add
To the sum of its miseries…
And then—I saw the trees.
Skeletons gaunt that gnarled the place,
Twisted and torn they rose —
The tortured bones of a perished race
Of monsters no mortal knows,
They startled the mind’s repose.
And a man stood there, as still as moss,
A lichen form that stared;
With an old blind hound that, at a loss,
Forever around him fared
With a snarling fang half bared.
I looked at the man; I saw him plain; Like a dead weed, gray and wan, Or a breath of dust. I looked again — And man and dog were gone, Like wisps of the graying dawn. …
Were they a part of the grim death there— Ragweed, fennel, and rue?
Or forms of the mind, an old despair, That there into semblance grew Out of the grief I knew?
MADISON CAWEIN
Poetry i (4), 1913
The difference between Cawein’s and Eliot’s rendering of the modern waste land metrically, logically, and structurally defines a critical change in consciousness, in politics, and in aesthetics, which is radicalized as well as symbolized by the first Great
war of this century. As Dorothy Norman says in her introduction to the reprinting of 291, "The creators of 291 were affected by free verse, by Cubism, Futurism and Expressionism; by interest in the unconscious; above all by the war"¹¹ (italics mine). For most of the poets included in this volume, the actual formal expression of Cawein’s poem (however modern
it may or may not be in theme) is no longer possible, aesthetically or politically, for the poetry of this century. And while cubism must inevitably prove only a part of the climate, it seems to me that in this aesthetic development—one which intentionally dismantles traditional forms while evoking multiple perspectives—we find a salient metaphor or, perhaps more accurately, a salient metonym, for understanding our changed and changing world.
J. V. B.
Acknowledgments
I am indebted to the late O. B. Hardison, Jr., for the initial and then continued encouragement for this project; to Edward Weismiller, Jr., Louis Mackey, Marsha Stevenson, and Jeffrey Roessner for help in research; and to Linda Taylor for many editorial suggestions. In addition, I must thank the generous librarians at the various libraries in which I worked for their help in locating material, but most particularly, Linda Gregory. I also wish to express my gratitude to the Institute for Study in the Liberal Arts at the University of Notre Dame for the financial support needed to bring this project to completion.
I would especially like to thank first Scott Mahler and then Shirley Warren who, as editors, so skillfully guided this book through production; to Deborah Birns the copyeditor, and to Linda Robertson for carefully designing a difficult manuscript.
Finally, I am indebted to the work of many fine scholars and critics, whose work informs every page of this text, often without specific acknowledgment.
As always, I owe more than I can express to Terry Brogan for both practical and moral support.
The following have given permission to quote from copyrighted works:
Day Coach,
from BlueJuniata by Malcolm Cowley, copyright 1929, renewed ® 1957 by Malcolm Cowley, all rights reserved, reprinted by permission of Viking Penguin, a division of Penguin Books USA Inc.
Iblac
is reprinted from Complete Poems, 1913-1962, by E. E. Cummings, by permission of Liveright Publishing Corporation, copyright • 1923,1925,1935,1938,1939,1940,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962 by the Trustees for the E. E. Cummings Trust; copyright® 1961,1963, 1968 by Marion Morehouse Cummings; this evangelist
and now that fierce few
are reprinted from is 5 by E. E. Cummings, edited by George James Firmage, by permission of Liveright Publishing Corporation, copyright • 1985 by E. E. Cummings Trust; copyright 1926 by Horace Liveright; copyright • 1954 by E. E. Cummings; copyright • 1985 by George James Firmage; let’s start a magazine
and ondumonde’
are reprinted from No Thanks by E. E. Cummings, edited by George James Firmage, by permission of Liveright Publishing Corporation, copyright 1935 by E. E. Cummings; copyright • 1968 by Marion Morehouse Cummings; copyright • 1972, 1978 by the Trustees for the E. E. Cummings Trust; copyright® 1973,1978 by Georgejames Firmage; Buffalo Bill’s,
O sweet spontaneous,
stinging,
ta,
the skinny voice,
when the spent day begins to frail,
my smallheaded pearshaped,
the wind is a Lady with,
and as usual i did not find him in cafes, the more dissolute atmosphere
are reprinted from TUlips & Chimneys by E. E. Cummings, edited by Georgejames Firmage, by permission of Liveright Publishing Corporation, copyright 1923, 1925 and renewed 1951, 1953 by E. E. Cummings; copyright • 1973, 1976 by the Trustees for the E. E. Cummings Trust; copyright® 1973,1976 by Georgejames Firmage. Buffalo Bill’s,
O sweet spontaneous,
Sunset
(stinging),
‘let’s start a magazine,’ and
ondumonde’" are reprinted in this volume as they appeared originally in journals and magazines prior to publication in book volumes of Cummings’ poetry.
Selected Poems by E. E. Cummings from Complete Poems Vol. I and Vol. II (UK and Commonwealth), Grafton Books, a division of the Collins Publishing Group.
Drawing,
Off Hours
by George Oppen: Collected Poems, copyright • 1934,1972 by George Oppen, New Directions Publishing Corporation; The Return,
Villanelle
by Ezra Pound: Personae, copyright 1926 by Ezra Pound, New Directions Publishing Corporation and Faber & Faber Ltd. Canto XXIII
by Ezra Pound: The Cantos of Ezra Pound, copyright 1934 by Ezra Pound, New Directions Publishing Corporation and Faber & Faber Ltd. Into the Shandy Westerness
by Kenneth Rexroth: Collected Shorter Poems, copyright 1940 by Kenneth Rexroth, New Directions Publishing Corporation. The Hothouse Plant,
Four Poems,
The Moon
by William Carlos Williams, copyright 1989 by William Eric Williams and P. H. Williams, New Directions Publishing Corporation Agents; Metric Figure,
The Descent of Winter,
Rain,
El Hombre,
In the ’Sconset Bus,
The Attic Which is Desire,
Perpetuum Mobile
by William Carlos Williams: Collected Poems 1909-1939 Volume I, copyright 1938 by New Directions Publishing Corporation.
xvl
Three Portraits of Painters: Picasso
from Selected Writings of Gertrude Stein, edited by Carl Van Vechten, copyright © 1946 by Random House, Inc.
Bison,
Wild Sunflower,
To the Painter Polelonema,
Snow Ghost
from the Collected Poems of Ivor Winters, 1978 Swallow Press. Ohio University Press/ Swallow Press.
Poems by Mina Loy by permission of the Jardon Society, the daughters of Mina Loy (Joella Bayer and Fabienne Benedict), and the editor of her complete writings (Roger L. Conover).
Permission to reprint Gertrude Stein was given by Random House and Levin & Gann; permission to reprint Wallace Stevens was given by Alfred A. Knopf; two poems by Ernest Kroll were used with permission by the poet. The poems of Louis Zukofsky were reprinted with the permission of Paul Zukofsky.
Every attempt was made to locate copyrights for other authors not mentioned above. As far as possible, this volume endeavors to reproduce the material as it first appeared in the small magazines from which it was taken. In the case of E. E. Cummings and Mina Loy, in particular, the original versions of poetry in the small magazines may differ from either changed or corrected versions in subsequent final editions.
PART OF THE CLIMATE
Introduction
My purpose here is to trace an important part of a major literary development (if not the major literary development) in American verse during the first part of this century by offering a brief discussion and select gathering of American cubist poetry. Numerous critics such as Henry M. Sayre, William Marling, Marjorie Perloff, and Glen MacLeod (to mention only a few) have already demonstrated at length the impact of cubism in the visual arts on such well-known twentieth-century American poets as William Carlos Williams, Ezra Pound, and Wallace Stevens, and other critics have shown the critical influence of cubism on numerous other American poets as well.¹ My purpose here is not to repeat those arguments, which convincingly show a newly perceived relationship between visual and verbal texts—a relationship brought to its most extreme expression in some of the later cubist paintings by the inclusion of words as signs of themselves — that influenced the developing aesthetics of many of our best modern poets. Rather, I wish to offer a discussion and presentation of the poetry which demonstrates in praxis both the development and the extent of this modern aesthetic in its American context. Yet, even here, the relationship of the visual and the verbal media during this period (largely the interim war years) is itself much more complex than this present volume can suggest. In fact, cubism, (which I regard as the quintessential twentieth-century form of expression) is only one of the forces in what we loosely call modernism,
and at least some poets of this time, including both Williams and Stevens, responded to a wide range of movements in the visual arts. Thus, I should stress, cubism is finally only part of the picture.
Before considering the development of American cubist poetry, however, it is necessary to discuss the fact that cubist literature in general and cubist poetry in particular are terms which have been debated since they were first coined, and have been variously defined, if accepted as valid terms for a verbal medium at all. In part because the French poet Apollinaire (who enthusiastically embraced the cubist aesthetic in his Les peintres cubistes, 1913) denied being a cubist poet, and in part because of a theoretical questioning of the validity of transferring a term to describe one artistic medium to another, several critics have denied the existence of cubist literature altogether.² Picasso himself implicitly rejects the transference of cubism
to any literary genre when he complains in 1923 that
mathematics, trigonometry, chemistry, psychoanalysis, music, and whatnot, have been related to cubism to give it an easier interpretation. All this has been pure literature, not to say nonsense, which has only succeeded in blinding people with theories.
He even says that Cubism has kept itself within the limits and limitations of painting, never pretending to go beyond it,
³ a remark which should, if taken literally, preclude the possiblity of cubist sculpture as well.
Yet Picasso’s complaint—or apologia for the pictorial domain of cubism—points to the degree to which others, if not Picasso himself, were quickly finding in the cubist art a visual technique, perhaps even an aesthetic metaphor, for a world in transition. This particular context for Picasso’s statements is signaled in his own text when he says that arts of transition do not exist,
a remark which is countered by the founding three years later of the journal called transition (appropriately, in Paris, where Picasso was residing) with the specific intention of encouraging a transition in the verbal arts. Eventually, the collaborative efforts of a number of writers from several different countries would appear in transition in a special issue called—and devoted to—The Revolution of the Word.
⁴ With more insight than Picasso himself recognized, in the same article he also says that "Art does not evolve by itself, the ideas of people change and with them their mode of expression" (italics mine).⁵
The radical change in the poetry produced in the interim war years does reflect what, in hindsight, appears to be an uncanny prescience
⁶ on Picasso’s part: a cultural shift in ideas which would be made manifest in the literary modes of expression (as well as the visual ones), including those of Gertrude Stein, William Faulkner, James Joyce, and T. S. Eliot. In fact, the term cubist literature was accepted critically as early as 1941 by Georges Lemaître and has subsequently gained so much acceptance that in addition to Stein, Faulkner, Joyce, and Eliot, Wallace Stevens, E. E. Cummings, Alain Robbe-Grillet, Ford Maddox Ford, and Max Jacob have all been called cubist writers. On the popular level, Dorothy Sayers simply assumes the legitimacy of the term as early as 1928 when she begins one of her mysteries with "On this particular evening, Masterman (the cubist poet) had brought a guest with him"⁷ [emphasis mine].
Despite its increased acceptance, cubist poetry has nonetheless been defined quite differently by different writers and critics. On the one hand, Kenneth Rexroth, a poet who was himself a part of the milieu with which we are here concerned, specifically describes William Carlos Williams as belonging in the Cubist traditon,
a tradition he defines as Imagism, Objectivism, the dissociation and rearrangement of the elements of concrete reality, rather than rhetoric or free association.
⁸ On the other hand, cubism has also been defined as a style marked by new syntax and punctuation, based on typographical dispersion,
as a poetic movement between futurism and expressionism, or as a style characterized by an unusual amount of punning, contradiction, parody, and word play
in order to create the ambiguity characteristic of visual poetry.⁹ Cubist poetry has also been confined to the writings concurrent with the cubist school in the visual arts, especially in France between 1912 and 1919; to the poetry printed in Nord-Sud, a journal edited by Reverdy; or else extended to works marked by visual fragmentation, such as Cummings’; works obsessed with perception, as in Stevens’ Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
; or works constituted by multiple voices and temporal layers, such as Eliot’s The Waste Land or Pound’s Cantos.¹⁰
Given this diversity, it is critical to remember that even within the visual arts, cubism proves to be a highly complex and diffuse movement that changed, rapidly, from what has come to be called analytic
cubism to synthetic
cubism. As Edward Fry notes,
crucial changes, particularly in Picasso, often took place during a period of months or weeks, as opposed to years or decades in older historical styles. This accelerated rate of stylistic change seems to have become the rule in twentieth-century art, and it may well be the effect of increased rates of change in other areas