Lexington Books
Pages: 208
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-4985-9344-1 • Hardback • November 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-9345-8 • eBook • November 2019 • $105.50 • (£82.00)
James Stamant is visiting assistant professor of English at Agnes Scott College.
I. Introduction: Authorial Anxiety in a Mass Media World
II. Sherwood Anderson and the Truth that Lies Beneath
III. James Joyce and What is Hidden in the Dublin Newspaper
IV. F. Scott Fitzgerald and Collaborative Movie Writing
V. Ernest Hemingway and Unfulfilled Possibilities in the Movies
VI. Djuna Barnes, Sui Sin Far, Zora Neale Hurston, and Virginia Woolf: Concerns and Opportunities
VII. Conclusion: The Future of Storytelling
James Stamant’s Competing Stories is insightful, knowing, and lucidly argued. It does more than explore the complex intersection between mass media and Modernism; it serves as a generous consideration of some of the leading lights of twentieth century literature. This book, with its impressive scope of authors and depth of analysis, is a necessary contribution to contemporary studies of Modernism.
— Mark Cirino, University of Evansville
In Competing Stories: Modernist Authors, Newspapers, and the Movies, James Stamant reminds us that the medium is indeed the message. This exhilarating study demonstrates that while modernist mainstays like James Joyce and F. Scott Fitzgerald lamented the emergence of “new media” they nevertheless assimilated the influence of their era’s transformative “platforms,”, their storytelling often absorbing the conditions of collaboration these technologies instituted while regretting the eroding of artistic singularity they occasioned. Whether newspapers or the cinema, these forms of mass communication and entertainment both reflected and enabled the acceleration of culture, altering notions of craftsmanship. In addition to a thoroughly historical and theoretical analysis of the implications of these media, Stamant deserves credit for focusing on a variety of neglected texts, from Fitzgerald’s Pat Hobby series to short stories by Djuna Barnes’s and Sui Sin Far to footage Zora Neale Hurston shot during her fieldwork in folklore. Competing Stories demonstrates how the literary arts in the end bested the competition for artistic accomplishment.
— Kirk Curnutt, Executive Director, The F. Scott Fitzgerald Society