Anexact Form and Modernist Culture
By (Author) James Reath
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
7th November 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Hardback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
What happens to form in a time of random walks and Uncertainty Principles, self-organising plasma membranes and multivalent logics And how might we better categorise the modernist avant-garde's confrontation with such complex and contradictory formalisms Anexact Form and Modernist Culture presents a soft taxonomy of the long mid-century avant-garde's fuzzy, grey, and viscous forms while investigating the aesthetic and affective valences of that which is 'essentially and not accidentally inexact', as Edmund Husserl writes in Ideas I (1913). Across five chapters on doodles and inkblots; iridescent surfaces and the noise of becoming; the erratic cultural life of precision; the mesomorphic imagination of protoplasm; and the groovy aesthetics of industrial chemistry Anexact Form and Modernist Culture offers a unique examination of avant-garde art and literature in a time of unprecedented err, smudge, ooze and wriggle.