"An ambitious project . tracing the evolution of the term "modernism" from a cultural buzzword to a consolidated . signifier of a particular set of artistic conventions and works . It would not be surprisingto see this study on any modernist's bookshelf." - Make It New (The Ezra Pound Society) "An excellent account of the development of the idea of Modernism, with a useful glossary and a very good critical bibliography." - Ian Patterson, University of Cambridge, UK "Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers." - CHOICE "The writers display deep and wide expertise as they move nimbly over more than a century's worth of fraught material.
They offer students and colleagues a thorough overview of the debates that have constituted the field they call "modernist studies."" - boundary 2 "Sean Latham and Gayle Rogers offer a perfectly timed history . that will be of immediate interest to anyone who studies modernism and twentieth-century literary history . They offer a succinct, often fascinating account of how and why it has become impossible to offer a tidy definition of modernism . The picture that emerges from Latham and Rogers's narrative is one of incredible complexity and variety . With this condensed, lucid, compelling history, Latham and Rogers enable their readers . to learn what has been accomplished in the last century of interrogating modernism and then discover what tasks remain. Because of the significant critical generosity that underwrites this study, we can conclude, with Pound, Latham, and Rogers,that there is still much to do.
" - James Joyce Quarterly.