Gertrude Stein Essay

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    William Carlos Williams “Philomena Andronica” and Gertrude Stein’s “Identity, a poem” are both visually and tonally very different texts. However, Stein and Williams have both used similar approaches to literary form in their poems as can be seen in their non-traditional approach to meaning generation and rejection of grammatical convention. The poems also both show an interest in the notion of identity and it’s fluidity, although Stein employs repeated images in her investigation whilst Williams

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    Movement and Space within “Portraits and Repetition,” by Gertrude Stein Gertrude Steins’ “Portraits and Repetitions,” facilitates the paradigm of linguistic displacement between subject and listener delineated by the dynamic and effectual relationship of the interrelated, rhythmic patterns characterized by the idea of movement as existence. This conviction denotes the essence of mobility portrayed throughout the text, the individual and collectives while commissioning itself through geographical

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    Once there was a movement for women to grow and expand what they wanted to do there were many poets and writers that wanted to write about the actions that were occurring in that time period. Once poet was Gertrude Stein, in Food and Objects, there is a feminist approach of seeming weak and unstable. Her use of word choice with at first thinking that nothing is making sense about her writing, along with her talking about domestic spaces and always looking outside. Her having multiple pieces of work

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    Cubist artist, Gertrude Stein, a modernist writer of the 20th century, rejected the expectations of a society that required writing to model the speech of the English language just as it required art to model the visions and still life images of everyday situations and experiences. Stein's writing is often compared to the visual art of modernist painting, such as Duchamp's work from the 1913 Armory Show, Nude Descending a Staircase No. 2, in which he

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    John Donne and Gertrude Stein are considered shapers of metaphysical poetry and modern poetry respectively, and the way they manipulate their poetry reflects the ideas of their literary periods. Gertrude Stein, as a cubist poet, plays with diction, syntax, and punctuation to impart meaning. Meanwhile, John Donne, as a metaphysical poet, relies more on the use of imagery and conceits to illustrate the purpose of his poems. Inspired by modern artists like Pablo Picasso, Gertrude Stein was determined

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    Essay on A New Perspective

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    A New Perspective Poets in American history have struggled over time to create or find a distinct American voice among the many different cultural influences and borrowed styles. Each era of poets contributed to the search in a slightly different way, but it was the modernists that really sought to make poetry new. A group to these modernists, called the expatriates, thought that the only way to obtain a new voice would be to escape any ties with old traditions, and to leave the country that

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    The first article I examined is titled “Gertrude Stein and Picasso: The Language of Surfaces”. This article was written by L. T. Fitz and exposes similarities between Stein’s writing technique and Picasso’s art technique, making the observation that both the artist and the writer attempt to express what is really seen of a subject, and avoid recreating subjects by memory (228). Fitz discusses in his thesis the three major similarities that he noticed between the two: approaching their topic from

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    Paris in the 1920’s – “The Lost Generation” Between the end of the First World War and Hitler's seizure of power a cultural explosion occurred in Paris that altered our notions of art and reality and shaped our way of viewing the world ever since. In the 1920's, Paris became the undisputed international capital of pleasure and was regarded as the cultural and artistic center of Europe with a reputation for staging one of its most glamorous eras, as well as some of the most spectacular

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    Essay on Pablo Picassos Bequest of Gertrude

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    Pablo Picassos Bequest of Gertrude Pablo Picasso was a very famous artist in his time. I have always found his work very interesting and unique. He has a style all his own and, I believe that this was what made him so famous and at the same time controversial. The painting I have chosen is called “Gertrude”. Pablo Picasso was born in Spain to Jose Ruiz and Maria Picasso. He later adopted his mother’s more distinguished maiden name Picasso. Picasso was a child prodigy who was recognized

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    the work of modernist Gertrude Stein. In the chapter labeled “Stein’s Tickle” Frost tries to help her readers understand and interpret Stein’s Tender Buttons, along with other works. She writes, “I want to suggest a new model for approaching Stein’s work that takes into account both the appeal and the difficulties of her texts: tickling (Frost 66).” Instead of focusing on Stein’s words and trying to explain what she means in her works, Frost clarifies what’s happening with Stein through the other side

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