Whether today is your first day back or you're still preparing for a new semester, join us in reading some new year's articles and stories from the Modernist Journal Project: https://t.co/VYtfT62uv3
Have some downtime this week while traveling or waiting on cooking timers? ModNets includes several Thanksgiving stories from modernist journals. Check them out here: https://t.co/j8pMEXnbDW
Lili Elbe’s life narrative is a significant work in the history of gender variance. This digital edition and archive attempt to correct misconceptions and enable thorough study of this narrative, the first popular and well-documented narrative of genital transformation surgery.
We've been quite for a while, but now we're back, with lots of exciting updates on the horizon. To start, check out our newest aggregated project, the Lili Elbe Digital Archive (https://t.co/sBbXSEa6Tc)!
This week's ModNets featured poet is Clement Wood, published in The Seven Arts and Poetry: A Magazine of Verse between 1916 and 1917. We believe he has the right idea about the power of coffee.️ ☕️ Check out the collection here:️ https://t.co/CiBLnhW5id
☀️Longing to hear the sound of waves beating the shore midst this slow March toward summer 🌊 Perhaps we'll settle for H.D. Stewart's Tasmanian Sketches to get us through! Check out the collection on ModNets: https://t.co/63JMkrKgI8
As March madness ensues, kick up your feet 🦶, drop the ball 🏀, and check out 👀this week's ModNet's Collection featuring Mr. Sandburg's movement of Chicago Poems, published in Poetry: A Magazine of Verse in 1914. View it here: https://t.co/Oh0SKY4iFY
The print issue lands in your mailboxes any minute! Mande Zecca’s “‘The Revolution Is Not Imminent’: The Uses of Elegy in the Long 1940s,” connects the despairing poetry of the mid-century to contemporary poetic militancy in the Anthropocene. Read it now: https://t.co/qrp3sXseVz
On this day in #history–1924 to be exact–Columbia University declares radio education a success. Guessing from Archibald Rutledge's poem, "Radio," many still found the technology mystifying 📻 Check out this week's featured collection in ModNets: https://t.co/rK9BPt9WrH
tweeps! I see you 👀! You have ONE WEEK left to submit paper ideas for a prospective cluster of Modernism/modernity print+ that @Southldntabby and I are editing. The topic? Elemental Modernism.
check it out: https://t.co/8DFnfXkOME
🌱🌷 Spring is slowly making its way here, so we thought we would celebrate with two poems by Mabel Linn published in Poetry: A Magazine of Verse in 1917 🌷🌱 Read them here! https://t.co/NE3loGx4S2
❄️An accurate description of all of us today as Chicago's temperatures spiral below tolerable ❄️ Check out Louise Driscoll's poem "A Frozen Brook" from Scribner's Magazine (1910) digitized by the Modernist Journals Project: https://t.co/jN3PKfYzJH
Returning to our youth this week with an imaginative collection by Evans Krehbiel - age, four. 🎒���🛴 Ripples is part of a larger collection of Poems by Children, published in Poetry in 1918. Check them out here! https://t.co/EAjDi650Ml
#poetry #modernism #childrenspoetry #verse
Make somebody's winter a little more tolerable by sending them a postcard from our newly restocked E-Postcard Sender. https://t.co/B0xpOnQBDt #postcards#winter
FORGET that you live in houses, that you may live in yourself--
FOR the smallest people live in the greatest houses.
#NEHgrant#MinaLoy#digitalhumanities
https://t.co/v1Qj1oFabi
Wishing all a Happy New Year with this special issue of the Weekly Tale-Teller from 1911, digitized by the Modernist Journals Project. Check it out here!
https://t.co/48Kco4xswO
This week's ModNets Featured Poet is Janet Loxley Lewis! 🌊🌿🏔 Experience a material rapture with four very grounded poems from Lewis' "Cold Hills" collection, published in Poetry: A Magazine of Verse in 1920: https://t.co/KHNeKPzzE3