Alternatives to language in Jean Toomer's Cane.

Jean Toomer’s Cane, often cited as an exemplar of Afro-American literature from the Harlem Renaissance, contains stories, poems and sketches concerning rural and urban black life. Toomer’s modernist concern of attempting to “offer alternative modes of representation” (Childs, Modernism 3) and his cr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gopi, Shreya.
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52265
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Jean Toomer’s Cane, often cited as an exemplar of Afro-American literature from the Harlem Renaissance, contains stories, poems and sketches concerning rural and urban black life. Toomer’s modernist concern of attempting to “offer alternative modes of representation” (Childs, Modernism 3) and his critique of the way language is manipulated or is inadequate is evident throughout Cane. Modernism, which can be considered the first three decades of the 20th century, has been described as being “part of the historical process by which the arts have dissociated themselves from nineteenth-century assumptions, which had come in the course of time to seem like dead conventions” (Faulkner 1). Modernist writers like Toomer can be seen as moving away from the “dead conventions” of Victorian realism and language, which fail to account for the “infinite complexity of reality” (Faulkner 15), towards unconventional, alternative methods of representation in an attempt to get around the limitations of language.