The McSweeney's Group: Modernist Roots and Contemporary Permutations in Little Magazines Thesis

(2013). The McSweeney's Group: Modernist Roots and Contemporary Permutations in Little Magazines . 10.25148/etd.FI13120418

thesis or dissertation chair

authors

  • Crespo, Charles J.

abstract

  • The purpose of this project centered on the influential literary magazine Timothy McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern. Using Bruno Latour’s network theory as well as the methods put forth by Robert Scholes and Clifford Wulfman to study modernist little magazines, I analyzed the influence McSweeney’s has on contemporary little magazines. I traced the connections between McSweeney’s and other paradigmatic examples of little magazines—The Believer and n+1—to show how the McSweeney’s aesthetic and business practice creates a model for more recent publications.

    My thesis argued that The Believer continues McSweeney’s aesthetic mission. In contrast, n+1 positioned itself against the McSweeney’s aesthetic, which indirectly created a space within the little magazines for writers, philosophers, and artists to debate the prevailing aesthetic theories of the contemporary period. The creation of this space connects these contemporary magazines back to modernist little magazines, thereby validating my decision to use the methods of Scholes and Wulfman.

publication date

  • November 15, 2013

keywords

  • Dave Eggers
  • Little Magazines
  • McSweeney's
  • Modernist Magazines
  • Network Theory
  • Periodical Studies
  • The Believer
  • Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern
  • n+1

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)