
Contents
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An Outline An Outline
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Patterns: Communities and Commerce Patterns: Communities and Commerce
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Convergences: Prose and Poetry Convergences: Prose and Poetry
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“Pound’s Pound of Commission”: Poetry, the Egoist, and the Smart Set “Pound’s Pound of Commission”: Poetry, the Egoist, and the Smart Set
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“The Two Strongest Prose Writers among Les Jeunes” “The Two Strongest Prose Writers among Les Jeunes”
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Notes Notes
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Works Cited Works Cited
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6 “In Europe They Usually Mention Us Together”: Joyce, Lawrence, and the Little Magazines
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Published:March 2015
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Abstract
This chapter focuses on the lines of convergence (and divergence) between D. H Lawrence and James Joyce's periodical publications, tracing the changing style and venues of their contributions over a period of some three decades to illuminate the many areas of similarity, particularly in relation to writing style and personal philosophy, between Joyce and Lawrence that have gone largely unnoticed. The first section explores how both authors followed similar “patterns” of periodical publishing, beginning with pieces in niche, British “little” magazines and newspapers and gradually branching out into a wider pool of Continental and American magazines that blurred the distinction between modernism and commercial culture, such as the Smart Set. The second part explores how Ezra Pound was the connective “link” between both men and the “medium” through which they garnered their most significant publications. The final section explores how, despite their perceived differences, the two men were working within and reacting to a similar framework of concerns, producing, through little magazines, a modernist aesthetic more similar than critics have previously believed.
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