Bill & Carlos : les Amériques de William Carlos Williams

As the sailors of William Carlos Williams’ Great American Novel (1923) lay eyes upon the coast of America, they exclaim: “Nuevo Mundo!” The epiphany comes from a sensory point of view, which will be Williams’s approach to his continent and its history. In his Autobiography (1951), Williams depicts t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anna Aublet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut des Amériques
Series:IdeAs
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ideas/2333
_version_ 1797305961149366272
author Anna Aublet
author_facet Anna Aublet
author_sort Anna Aublet
collection DOAJ
description As the sailors of William Carlos Williams’ Great American Novel (1923) lay eyes upon the coast of America, they exclaim: “Nuevo Mundo!” The epiphany comes from a sensory point of view, which will be Williams’s approach to his continent and its history. In his Autobiography (1951), Williams depicts the language of this new land—his own­—as “barbarous,” thus playing on the original meaning of the term. He keeps questioning the ontological status of the stranger that he simultaneously is and is not. The everlasting quest for a poetry of the hic et nunc and a primeval autochthonous language leads to a new poetic appropriation of the mythological history of the continent. In his two novels, The Great American Novel (1923) and In the American Grain (1925), the poet travels across the continent back to the origins of the Americas as he keeps entwining the history of the United States with the past of Latin America, his mother’s land. Besides, the journey also leads him to a linguistic entwining: the use of Spanish words and phrases seems to activate a hermeneutic quest. Though this semantic encryption may appear at first as an obstacle to Williams’s claim for a democratic poetry, it will be interesting to see how Carlos sets the hermeneutic process into motion by questioning Bill. Only through poetry does the poet succeed in reconciling his two identities: Bill, the native from New Jersey and Carlos, whose motherland remains in Porto Rico.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T00:33:10Z
format Article
id doaj.art-fa7a65c95d7044fe8cd1c6a9d6d5b266
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1950-5701
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T00:33:10Z
publisher Institut des Amériques
record_format Article
series IdeAs
spelling doaj.art-fa7a65c95d7044fe8cd1c6a9d6d5b2662024-02-15T13:54:02ZengInstitut des AmériquesIdeAs1950-57011110.4000/ideas.2333Bill & Carlos : les Amériques de William Carlos WilliamsAnna AubletAs the sailors of William Carlos Williams’ Great American Novel (1923) lay eyes upon the coast of America, they exclaim: “Nuevo Mundo!” The epiphany comes from a sensory point of view, which will be Williams’s approach to his continent and its history. In his Autobiography (1951), Williams depicts the language of this new land—his own­—as “barbarous,” thus playing on the original meaning of the term. He keeps questioning the ontological status of the stranger that he simultaneously is and is not. The everlasting quest for a poetry of the hic et nunc and a primeval autochthonous language leads to a new poetic appropriation of the mythological history of the continent. In his two novels, The Great American Novel (1923) and In the American Grain (1925), the poet travels across the continent back to the origins of the Americas as he keeps entwining the history of the United States with the past of Latin America, his mother’s land. Besides, the journey also leads him to a linguistic entwining: the use of Spanish words and phrases seems to activate a hermeneutic quest. Though this semantic encryption may appear at first as an obstacle to Williams’s claim for a democratic poetry, it will be interesting to see how Carlos sets the hermeneutic process into motion by questioning Bill. Only through poetry does the poet succeed in reconciling his two identities: Bill, the native from New Jersey and Carlos, whose motherland remains in Porto Rico.https://journals.openedition.org/ideas/2333modernismWilliam Carlos WilliamsHybridityNew WorldmythAmericas
spellingShingle Anna Aublet
Bill & Carlos : les Amériques de William Carlos Williams
IdeAs
modernism
William Carlos Williams
Hybridity
New World
myth
Americas
title Bill & Carlos : les Amériques de William Carlos Williams
title_full Bill & Carlos : les Amériques de William Carlos Williams
title_fullStr Bill & Carlos : les Amériques de William Carlos Williams
title_full_unstemmed Bill & Carlos : les Amériques de William Carlos Williams
title_short Bill & Carlos : les Amériques de William Carlos Williams
title_sort bill carlos les ameriques de william carlos williams
topic modernism
William Carlos Williams
Hybridity
New World
myth
Americas
url https://journals.openedition.org/ideas/2333
work_keys_str_mv AT annaaublet billcarloslesameriquesdewilliamcarloswilliams