ABSTRACT

This unique essay collection considers the impact of New York on the life and works of Wallace Stevens. Stevens lived in New York from 1900 to 1916, working briefly as a journalist, going to law school, laboriously starting up a career as a lawyer, getting engaged and married, gradually mixing with local avant-garde circles, and eventually emerging as one of the most exciting and surprising voices in modern poetry. Although he then left the city for a job in Hartford, Stevens never saw himself as a Hartford poet and kept gravitating toward New York for nearly all things that mattered to him privately and poetically: visits to galleries and museums, theatrical and musical performances, intellectual and artistic gatherings, shopping sprees and gastronomical indulgences.

Recent criticism of the poet has sought to understand how Stevens interacted with the literary, artistic, and cultural forces of his time to forge his inimitable aesthetic, with its peculiar mix of post-romantic responses to nature and a metropolitan cosmopolitanism. This volume deepens our understanding of the multiple ways in which New York and its various aesthetic attractions figured in Stevens’ life, both at a biographical and poetic level.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

Back at the Waldorf?

chapter 1|16 pages

Stevens and New York

The Long Gestation

chapter 2|17 pages

“My Head Full of Strange Pictures”

Stevens in the New York Galleries

chapter 3|17 pages

“The Whispering of Innumerable Responsive Spirits”

Stevens' New York Music

chapter 4|14 pages

Stevens Dancing

“Something Light, Winged, Holy”

chapter 5|20 pages

The Invisible Skyscraper

Stevens and Urban Architecture

chapter 6|16 pages

On Stevensian Transitoriness

chapter 7|12 pages

Stevens and Henry James

The New York Connection

chapter 8|11 pages

“Unless New York Is Cocos”

Stevens, New York, and the Discourse of Disappointment

chapter 9|18 pages

Bourgeois Abstraction

Gastronomy, Painting, Poetry, and the Allure of New York in Early to Late Stevens

chapter |8 pages

Coda

Wallace Stevens of the New York School