Books by David Holdeman

University of North Texas  :   English   :   David Holdeman

W. B. Yeats in Context

Author(s): David Holdeman, Ben Levitas
Publication date: 2015-12-17
ISBN: 1107456800, ISBN-13: 9781107456808

W. B. Yeats is a writer who requires, and at the same time tests the limits of, contextual study. More than perhaps any other Irish writer, he produced his own context as much as it produced him. His cultural and political activities, combined with his prolific literary output, made an impact that can only be understood by close attention to his words in relation to the times in which he lived. W. B. Yeats in Context maps Yeats' world in concise, lively essays by distinguished critics and historians. The places, people, themes and intellectual frameworks most important to his development receive close attention, as do his artistic influences, and the production and reception of his work. As a gateway into the study of Yeats, this volume offers much new information for both students, scholars and anyone interested in the life and times of this enigmatic and influential poet.

The Cambridge Introduction to W.B. Yeats (Cambridge Introductions to Literature)

Author(s): David Holdeman
Publication date: 2006-09-25
ISBN: 0521547377, ISBN-13: 9780521547376

This introduction to one of the twentieth century's most important writers examines Yeats's poems, plays and stories in relation to biographical, literary, and historical contexts. Yeats wrote with passion and eloquence about personal disappointments, his obsession with Ireland, and the modern era's loss of faith in traditional beliefs about art, religion, empire, social class, gender and sex. His works uniquely reflect the gradual transition from Victorian aestheticism to the modernism of Pound, Eliot and Joyce. This is the first introductory study to consider his work in all genres in light of the latest biographies, new editions of his letters and manuscripts, and recent accounts by feminist and postcolonial critics. While using this introduction, students will have instant access to the world of current Yeats scholarship as well as being provided with the essential facts about his life and literary career and suggestions for further reading.

"In the Seven Woods" and "The Green Helmet and Other Poems": Manuscript Materials (The Cornell Yeats)

Author(s): W. B. Yeats, David Holdeman
Publication date: 2002-06-20
ISBN: 0801440343, ISBN-13: 9780801440342

This volume presents the surviving manuscripts, typescripts, and early printed texts for all of the poems W. B. Yeats included at one time or another in two remarkably significant and protean collections: In the Seven Woods, first published in 1903, and The Green Helmet and Other Poems, first published in 1910. It also documents the extant early record for seven poems Yeats wrote between 1899 and 1914 but either never published or never attached to one of his plays or collections of poems.

During this crucial period in his career, Yeats transformed himself from a talented late-Victorian aesthete to a major modernist poet. The photographs and transcriptions provided here reveal much about how this remarkable change occurred. They are accompanied by ample supporting materials, including a descriptive bibliography of the manuscripts and an extensive critical introduction.

Much Labouring: The Texts and Authors of Yeats's First Modernist Books (Editorial Theory and Literary Criticism)

Author(s): David Holdeman
Publication date: 1998-02-01
ISBN: 0472108514, ISBN-13: 9780472108510

With a career stretching from the last years of the nineteenth century well into the 1930s, William Butler Yeats is perceived as a key figure in the transition from Romanticism to modernism in English literature. In Much Labouring David Holdeman opens up new paths of thinking about Yeats's modernism by paying close attention to the production of his early books as well as to their publication histories.
Two characteristics stand out in Yeats's career. First, there was his intricate interaction with collaborators, including his sister E. C. Yeats, to produce fine books in which the deliberate use of the page created meaningful relationships among the poems. These collaborative works revealed tangled ideological commitments to Irish cultural nationalism, to women's emancipation, and to wealthy book collectors. Second, there was Yeats's attachment to pervasive, repeated revision of his own work--the struggle to extend his authority over its reception.
Yet without an understanding of how publishers compromised Yeats's intentions in order to capitalize on the success of his early work, the richness of these characteristics is lost, and Yeats's image flattened. Holdeman restores to the picture a sense of the textual processes that qualify Yeats's perceived ideological commitments, giving a fuller understanding of what the poet was up to.
Although Much Labouring will particularly interest students of modernism, the uncommon significance of Yeats's textual experiments suggests new perspectives on interpretive and editorial theories and practices generally.
David Holdeman is Assistant Professor of English, University of North Texas.

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