Archival Evidence

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(Structure of the Poem)
(Globalization)
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''The Dial'''s advertisements reveal multicultural intrigue, albeit, from a safe distance.  In the supplementary section of advertisements there is evidence of a great deal of upper-class marketing.  Solicitors invite readers to Oriental rug wholesalers, Jewelry dealers, Russian tea rooms, Spanish themed vacations, patronage to The Plaza hotel in New York and Boston, and to purchase multi-volume literary collections from such venerated authors as Mark Twain and Joseph Conrad.  Though the advertisements do suggest a post-war fascination with the exotic, they also implicate intellectual and societal elitism.  One may inquire whether the "worldly" audience could have included the minorities it so fancifully publicizes.
 
''The Dial'''s advertisements reveal multicultural intrigue, albeit, from a safe distance.  In the supplementary section of advertisements there is evidence of a great deal of upper-class marketing.  Solicitors invite readers to Oriental rug wholesalers, Jewelry dealers, Russian tea rooms, Spanish themed vacations, patronage to The Plaza hotel in New York and Boston, and to purchase multi-volume literary collections from such venerated authors as Mark Twain and Joseph Conrad.  Though the advertisements do suggest a post-war fascination with the exotic, they also implicate intellectual and societal elitism.  One may inquire whether the "worldly" audience could have included the minorities it so fancifully publicizes.
  
The Waste Land is accompanied by several contributions from around the world in both magazines. This is a concrete example of the globalization that began as a result of WWI. Soldiers have traveled overseas, have seen places for themselves.
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This marks a fascination with the globalization that began as a result of WWI. Soldiers had traveled abroad and seen alternative forms of society function. Not only was there an increased aesthetic interest in global commodities, but these magazines indicate that there was an incresed interest in intellectual diversity. For example, in ''the Dial'', there are multiple European contributors, including Austrian author, Arthur Schnitzler, whose novel ''Doctor Graesler'' was translated from German into English for this publication. Other contributors to the New York magazine were either European, or were Americans relocated to Europe.  Robert Delaunay was the French artist, whose modern-gothic painting is reproduced beside ''The Dial'''s debut of "The Waste Land."  Delaunay was an avant-gard, Orphism artist, thus, the selection by editors to include his art within The Dial is in keeping with the culture of curiosity demonstrated by the New York readership.
There is an increased aesthetic interest in global commodities.
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International Collaboration:
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Both the USA and Britain had been collaborating as Allies at the end of the war, but now there is further international collaboration evident in these magazines. For example, in the Dial, there are multiple German contributors, including Schnitzler, whose novel ''Doctor Graesler'' was translated from German into English for this publication.
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Additional contributors: Constantin Brancusi- scultper, born in Romania, living in Paris Robert Delaunay - born in Paris in 1887, influenced by Russeau Elie Faure - author of The History of Art, reviewed by Thomas Craven in Feb 1922 issue of The Dial. In this issue, Faure replies to Craven's criticism. Duncan Grant - born in Scottish highlands. Adolph Dehn - living in Germany and Austria Sebastien Cauiflower - American.
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==Thematic Coherence==
 
==Thematic Coherence==

Revision as of 16:30, 12 September 2012

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