Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
My Silver Planet : A Secret History of Poetry and Kitsch - Daniel Tiffany

My Silver Planet

A Secret History of Poetry and Kitsch

By: Daniel Tiffany

Paperback | 16 March 2015

At a Glance

Paperback


$68.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $17.25 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

Reveals the hidden origins of kitsch in poetry from the eighteenth century.

Taking its title from John Keats, My Silver Planet contends that the problem of elite poetry's relation to popular culture bears the indelible mark of its turbulent incorporation of vernacular poetry--a legacy shaped by nostalgia, contempt, and fraudulence. Daniel Tiffany reactivates and fundamentally redefines the concept of kitsch, freeing it from modernist misapprehension and ridicule, by tracing its origin to poetry's alienation from the emergent category of literature. Tiffany excavates the forgotten history of poetry's relation to kitsch, beginning with the exuberant revival of archaic (and often spurious) ballads in Britain in the early eighteenth century. In these controversial events of poetic imposture, Tiffany identifies a submerged pact--in opposition to the bourgeois values of literature--between elite and vernacular poetries.

Tiffany argues that the ballad revival--the earliest explicit formation of what we now call popular culture--sparked a perilous but seemingly irresistible flirtation (among elite audiences) with poetic forgery that endures today in the ambiguity of the kitsch artifact: Is it real or fake, art or kitsch? He goes on to trace the genealogy of kitsch in texts ranging from nursery rhymes and poetic melodrama to the lyric commodities of Baudelaire. He scrutinizes the fascist "paradise" inscribed in Ezra Pound's Cantos as well as the avant-garde poetry of the New York School and its debt to pop and "plastic" art. By exposing and elaborating the historical poetics of kitsch, My Silver Planet transforms our sense of kitsch as a category of material culture.

Industry Reviews

""A strength of Tiffany's book as a whole is that its history of the relationship of lyric poetry and kitsch from graveyard gothic to Pound reveals the pleasures and anxieties of an art forever seeking to justify its artifices in a natural authority, whether in the rhythms of labor, the rhythms of the sexual body, an essentialism of blood or land, or a totalitarian politics.""

More in Literary Theory

How to Read a Book : A Touchstone book - Charles Van Doren

RRP $34.99

$18.75

46%
OFF
Thought as Experience in Bataille, Cioran, and Rosset - Joseph Acquisto
Experimental Criticism : Franco Moretti and Literature - Francesco de Cristofaro
Photography and Film in the Fiction of J.M. Coetzee - Hermann Wittenberg
In Love with Love : The Persistence and Joy of Romantic Fiction - Ella Risbridger
Camera Lucida : Vintage Classics - Roland Barthes

RRP $26.99

$16.75

38%
OFF
An Introduction to Literature, Criticism and Theory : 6th Edition - Andrew Bennett
Metaphors We Live By - George Lakoff

$33.99

Middlemarch : Collins Classics - George Eliot
Create Dangerously : Penguin Modern - Albert Camus
Poetics : Penguin Classics - Aristotle

RRP $26.99

$20.75

23%
OFF
Literary Theory : An Introduction - Terry Eagleton

RRP $38.95

$31.75

18%
OFF