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Making No Compromise: Index

Making No Compromise
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Acknowledgments
  2. Introduction
  3. 1. The Buzz and the Sting
  4. 2. Temples of Tomorrow: Anderson and the Little Review, 1914–1916
  5. 3. Political and Literary Radicals
  6. 4. Interregnum: Chicago, San Francisco, New York
  7. 5. Pound, Yeats, Eliot, and Joyce
  8. 6. Lesbian Literature, Women Writers, and Modernist Mysticism
  9. 7. George Ivanovich Gurdjieff: A Messenger Between Two Worlds
  10. 8. The Heap Era
  11. Epilogue: Post–Little Review Years
  12. Notes
  13. Bibliography
  14. Index

Index

alchemy, 130

Aldington, Richard, 76–77, 78–79, 99, 160

American artists, versus European artists, 136–37, 143–44

American Society for Psychical Research, 14

anarchism

and Anderson’s relationship with Goldman, 65–67, 247n65

homosexuality and, 72–73

individualism and, 71–72

in Little Review, 3–4, 62–64, 67–69

Lowell and, 76

modernism and, 75

Nietzscheans and, 74

Russia and, 64–65

Anderson, Arthur Aubrey, 19–20, 27, 232

Anderson, Cornelia, 56

Anderson, Jean, 232

Anderson, Jessie Shortridge, 19, 20, 27

Anderson, Lois, 22, 69, 70, 191–92, 232

Anderson, Margaret

adopts nephews, 192

animal types of, 196

appearance of, 19

on art and anarchism, 75

articles on anarchism, 67–69

authors influencing, 8, 51–52

autobiographies of, 6, 18, 19–20, 32, 230, 231, 237

background of, 2–3

Barnes and, 162, 164

beach campsite of, 69–70, 71

Bergson’s influence on, 50–51

career of, 1–2

and censorship of Little Review, 100–101

and Chicago Literary Renaissance, 25–26

considers ending Little Review, 188–90

and content of Little Review, 3–4

conversion to Gurdjieff, 11–13, 185, 193, 199–200, 237

death of, 233

difficulties between Heap and, 104–7, 189–90

dissatisfaction with Little Review, 93–94

early employment of, 22–23

early time in Chicago, 33

education of, 21

on Ellis’s “The Love of Tomorrow” lecture, 54–55

and end of Little Review, 220–22

family of, 19–20

FBI file on, 246n22

on feminism, 55–58, 59

final years of, 6, 232–33

financial difficulties of, 69, 70–71, 103–4

on Freytag-Loringhoven, 179, 180

on Freytag-Loringhoven and Williams, 181

on function of criticism, 44–45

Goldman and, 65–67, 86

on Goldman and anarchism, 63–64

Goldman and Lowell and, 62–63

Goldman’s disagreements with, 76, 95

Gurdjieff’s influence on, 2, 5–6, 196, 207–8, 234–35

on Heap’s arrival at Little Review, 86–87

Heap’s influence on, 38–39

images of, 108f, 110f, 113f, 115f, 121f, 122f

and imagism, 77–81

individualism of, 48–49, 71–72

legacy of, 7–8

love of music, 21

Lowell and, 62–63, 76, 77–78, 81–84, 86

media and scholarly portrayals of, 153

meets Gurdjieff, 200–201

meets Leblanc, 190–91

mental health struggles of, 189–90

and mission of Little Review, 41–42, 43

moves Little Review to New York, 96–99

Nietzsche’s influence on, 46–50

on Pater, 45

personality of, 16, 17, 39

post-Little Review life of, 224–32

and Pound as Little Review’s foreign editor, 128–29, 130, 138–39

and Pound’s departure from Little Review, 136

and promotion of female modernists, 156–57, 186

and publication of Ulysses, 146–47, 148, 151

on Sanger and contraception, 60–61

scholarship on, 234

on sexuality, 54–55, 235–36

sexuality of, 29–33

similarities between Heap and, 39–40

Sinclair and, 171

spirituality of, 11, 14–15, 20–21, 235

starts Little Review, 3, 17, 18–19, 23–27, 40

Stein and, 161

studies at Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man, 201–2, 203

summers in Mill Valley, 91–93

supports Goldman and Berkman during trial, 101–3

travels to Paris, 192

Ulysses trial’s impact on, 4–5, 12

and Yeats, 85–86, 132–33

See also Little Review; Ulysses trial

Anderson, Sherwood, 27, 29, 46, 69, 90, 243n16

Angel Island (Gilmore), 56–57

animal types, in Gurdjieff’s psychological scheme, 196

antiwar sentiment, 84–85, 99, 100, 101

Apollinaire, Guillaume, 212–14

Aragon, Louis, 215–16

Arensberg, Walter, 179, 180

Arp, Hans, 177

art

and anarchism, 75

and Gurdjieff’s influence on Anderson, 207–8

Nietzsche on, 49–50

Art Institute of Chicago, 88–89

Ashe of Rings (Butts), 175–76

Ashleigh, Charles, 78

Barnes, Djuna, 98, 106–7, 156–57, 161–64, 165, 185–86, 221, 229, 256n30

Barney, Natalie, 221

Barnsdall, Aline (“Nineteen Millions”), 87, 91

Beach, Sylvia, 153

Beaumont, Etienne de, 217

Beecher, Lyman, 21

Beelzebub’s Tales (Gurdjieff), 197–99

Benedict, Ruth, 58

Benstock, Shari, 161

Bergson, Henri, 50–51, 86, 235

Berkman, Alexander, 68, 69, 95, 101–3

Berkowitz, Eric, 254n83

birth control, 60, 72

Bishop, John, 254n76

Blanke, Marie, 36

Blavatsky, Helen, 20, 60, 195

Bloom, Leopold, 155

Bodenheim, Maxwell, 31, 69, 79, 138

Boehme, Jacob, 154–55

Bosschere, Jean de, 132

Bourne, Randolph, 167

Breton, André, 214–15, 216

Brook, Peter, 227

Brookhaven, 104–5

Brooking, Nesta, 226, 227

Browne, Francis, 23

Browne, Maurice, 31

Browne’s Bookstore, 22–23

Bryher, Winifred (Annie Winifred Ellerman), 160, 167, 168–69, 256n16

Bucke, R. M., 52

Bufano, Remo, 217

“Bundles for Them: A History of Giving Bundles” (Stein), 161

Burke, Carolyn, 166

Burke, Kenneth, 212

Burwick, Frederick Berwick, 50–51

Butts, Mary, 174–77, 203

Caffrey, Margaret, 58

“Cantleman’s Spring-mate” (Lewis), 100–101

Carlson, Maria, 64

Carpenter, Edward, 30, 52, 53, 73, 236, 244n50

Carter, Huntley, 79–80

Caruso, Dorothy “Duffy,” 6, 227–28, 229

“Cast-Iron Lover” (Freytag-Loringhoven), 183

Castle, Terry, 156

censorship, 100–101, 148–49

Champcommunal, Elspeth, 225, 228

“Chance Encounter” (Bryher), 160

Chase, Sheriff, 91, 94

Chicago

Anderson and Heap’s beginnings in, 2–3

Anderson moves to, 22–23

Anderson’s early time in, 33

Little Review leaves, 96

Chicago Literary Renaissance, 3, 24–26, 40, 45

Chicago Vice Commission, 29

Childs, Donald J., 135

“Chinese Written Character as a Medium for Poetry, The” (Fenollosa), 132

Christianity, 59–60, 65, 68, 74, 204

Christian Science, 20, 166

Ciolkowski, Muriel, 160

Clark, Elizabeth, 229, 232

Cocteau, Jean, 191, 192

Collecott, Diana, 81, 85

companionate marriage, 157–58

“Comstock Law,” 101

Conscription Act, 101–3

Constructivists, 220

Continent, 23

contraception, 60, 72

“Cooperation” (Pound), 140

Copley, Antony, 53

Cott, Nancy, 55, 58

Cowley, Malcolm, 12

Crane, Clara, 69

Crane, Hart, 189–90, 200, 211

criticism, 44–45, 49–50

cross-dressing, 33, 36–37, 159

Crowley, Aleister, 174–75

Crunden, Robert, 9, 155

Cubism, 212–13

Currey, Margery, 25, 56

Dada/Dadaism, 177–86, 214, 215, 216

Daedalus, Stephen, 155

dances, of Gurdjieff, 199–200, 204

D’Annunzio, Gabriele, 88, 249n2

Dark Flower, The (Galsworthy), 43

Darwin, Charles, 13, 197

Daumal, Rene, 215

Dawson, Mitchell, 139

Dean, Harriet, 30–31, 69, 71, 72, 91, 102

de Cleyre, Voltairine, 68

Defense of Idealism (Sinclair), 173

Dell, Floyd, 19, 25, 28–29, 31, 44–45, 56

D’Emilio, John, 29

De Salzmann, Alexander, 118f

Deutsch, Babette, 170, 173

Dial, 23

Douglass, Paul, 50–51

Draper, Muriel, 210–11

“Dreaming of the Bones, The” (Yeats), 134

Dreier, Katherine, 180

Dreiser, Theodore, 90

Drimmer, Melvin, 48

Duchamp, Marcel, 177, 180–81, 182

Duffey, Bernard, 25–26, 40, 48, 71–72

“Easter” (Toomer), 211–12

Eastman, Max, 102

Eddy, Mary Baker, 20, 60

“Eeldrop and Appleplex” (Eliot), 135

egoism, 74, 75

élan vital, 50–51

Eliot, George, 59–60

Eliot, T. S., 9, 134–35, 170, 221

Ellis, Edith, 53, 54–55, 84

Ellis, Havelock, 28, 30, 53, 73, 147, 157, 244n49

Ellmann, Richard, 151, 154, 255n96

Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 14, 51–52, 72, 235

esotericism, 2, 11, 13–15, 252n9. See also mysticism; occultism; spiritualism

eugenics, 60

evolution, theory of, 13, 197

Faderman, Lillian, 159, 160

Falk, Candance, 73

Fellowship of New Life, 53

feminism, 55–59, 72, 144–47, 165, 172–73

Fenollosa, Ernest, 132

“Fern” (Toomer), 211–12

Ficke, Arthur Davison, 79

Finn, Howard, 168

Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 26–27

Flanner, Janet, 16, 19, 227, 232, 233

Fletcher, John Gould, 80–81

Foes of Our Threshold, The (Roosevelt), 99

Forbidden Fires (Anderson), 6, 231–32

Foster, George Burman, 47

Foster, Jeannette, 231–32

fourth dimension, 213

Fourth Way, The (The Work), 120f, 155, 194, 195, 199, 204

Foy, Roslyn, 175, 176

Frank, Florence Kiper, 70

Freedman, Estelle, 29

Freidman, Melvin, 128–29

French poets, 9, 131–32, 133, 135, 212–14, 236

Freud, Sigmund, 12–13, 29, 157

Freytag-Loringhoven, Elsa von, 156–57, 177, 178–86

Friday Literary Review, 25–26

Fromm, Gloria, 168

Galsworthy, John, 42–43, 46

Gilbert, Stuart, 153

Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, 58

Gilmore, Inez Haynes, 56–57, 59

Gladys (Anderson’s mistress), 106

Glaspell, Susan, 98

Golden, Sue, 94, 160

Golden Dawn, The, 11

Goldman, Emma

on Anderson and Dean, 30–31, 72, 73

Anderson and Heap meet, 3

Anderson’s disagreements with, 76, 95

and Anderson’s editorship of Little Review, 86

and Anderson’s interest in anarchy, 63–64, 65–67, 68

and final issue of Little Review, 221

on homosexuality, 236

Lowell and, 62–63

reaction to Heap, 95

tried for violation of Conscription Act, 101–3

Gordon, Lyndall, 135

Gough, Jim, 172–73

Gourmont, Remy de, 131–32

Greenwich Village, 96–99, 158

Gurdjieff, George Ivanovich, 119f

allure of, 205–6

Anderson and Heap meet, 200–201

Anderson and Heap’s conversion to, 11–13, 185, 193, 199–200, 237

and Anderson and Heap’s post-Little Review life, 225

Anderson and Heap study with, 200–201

concept of humans as “three centered beings,” 218

followers of, published in Little Review, 210–13

Heap as student of, 205

Heap as teacher of ideas of, 92–93, 205, 226

Heap’s notes on Fourth Way, 120f

influence of, 10, 207, 236–37

influence on Heap and Anderson, 2, 5–6, 207–8, 234–35

influences on, 9–10

and Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man, 118f, 201–4, 206

interpretation of human psychology, 196–97

mechanical metaphors of, 219

and music, 21

origins of, 194–95

Ouspensky and, 193–94

in popular culture, 262n64

scholarship on, 206–7, 260–61n24

teachings of, 10–11, 12–13, 20, 195–96

and Theosophy, 155

writings of, 197–99

Hackett, Francis, 26

Hand, Augustus, 101

Hansen, Harry, 69

Harris, Bertha, 233

Harrison, Jane Ellen, 176

Hartley, C. Gasquoine, 56

Hartmann, Thomas de, 204

Haywood, Big Bill, 66

H. D. (Hilda Doolittle), 76–77, 78–79, 80–81, 85, 170

Heap, Chad, 27–28

Heap, Jane

adopts Anderson’s nephews, 192

on Anderson and Leblanc, 191

on Anderson’s mental health struggles, 189

arrives at Little Review, 86–89

background of, 2–3

Barnes and, 162, 256n30

career of, 1–2

and censorship of Little Review, 100–101

and content of Little Review, 4

conversion to Gurdjieff, 11–13, 185, 193, 199–200, 237

critical articles of, 89–90

dark side of, 93

death of, 229

difficulties between Anderson and, 104–7, 189–90

early years of, 33–35

and end of Little Review, 220–22

final years of, 6–7

and financial troubles of Little Review, 104

on Freytag-Loringhoven, 183–85

Goldman’s reaction to, 95

on Greenwich Villagers, 98–99

Gurdjieff’s influence on, 2, 5–6, 196, 234–35

as Gurdjieff student, 205

on Hemingway, 193

images of, 109f, 110f, 111f, 113f, 114f, 123f

influence on Anderson, 38–39

interest in theater, 37

and International Theatre Exposition, 217

legacy of, 7–8

and lesbian themes in Little Review, 158–60, 161

and Little Review Gallery, 218

and Little Review’s move to New York, 96, 97–99

as Little Review’s primary editor, 4–5, 143–44, 208, 209–23

and Machine Age Exposition, 218–20

media and scholarly portrayals of, 153

meets Gurdjieff, 200–201

notes on Fourth Way, 120f

personality of, 16, 39

Peters’ depiction of, 260n15

post-Little Review life of, 224–29

and Pound as Little Review’s foreign editor, 128, 129, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141–42

and Pound’s departure from Little Review, 136

and promotion of female modernists, 156–57, 186

and publication of Ulysses, 147–48

resists ending Little Review, 189

scholarship on, 234

on sexuality, 235–36

sexuality of, 35–37

similarities between Anderson and, 39–40

Sinclair and, 171–72

spiritual aspect of life of, 14–15

spirituality in works of, 11

studies at Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man, 201–2, 203

and success of Little Review, 17

summers in Mill Valley, 91–93

supports Goldman and Berkman during trial, 101–3

as teacher of Gurdjieff’s ideas, 92–93, 205, 226

“The Light Occupations of the Editor while There is Nothing to Edit,” 112f

travels to Paris, 192

Ulysses trial’s impact on, 4–5, 12

as visual artist, 37–38

and Yeats, 133

See also Little Review; Ulysses trial

Hecht, Ben, 19, 31–32, 69, 96, 142, 231

Hemingway, Ernest, 193, 225

Henke, Suzette, 254n76

Hermes Trismegistus, 10, 11, 80

Hermeticism, 155, 197

Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, The, 11, 194

Hill, Joe, 67

Hinton, Charles, 53–54, 79, 213

Hinton, James, 53

Hinton, Margaret, 53

Hinzenberg, Olga Ivanovna Lazovich, 202

Hochstein, David, 102

homosexuality

anarchism and, 72–73

Anderson’s defense of, 54–55

changing attitudes toward, 27–29

and influences on Anderson and Heap, 235–36

LGBTQ subculture in Chicago, 3

spirituality and, 52–55, 59, 60

See also lesbianism

Hoyt, Helen, 94

Hulme, Katherine, 6, 205

“I Cannot Sleep” (Heap), 159

Idealism, 172–73

imagism, 4, 62–63, 76–81, 85, 170

“Incense and Splendor” (Anderson), 57

individualism, 48–49, 51, 60, 71–72, 75

Ingman, Heather, 157, 176

Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man, 118f, 201–4, 206

Interior, 22, 23

International Theatre Exposition, 125f, 217–18

Iverson, Sade, 242n9

James, Henry, 141

James, William, 206

Japanese Noh plays, 134

Jenkins, Ralph, 155

Jepson, Edgar, 140–41

“Jodindranath Mawhwor’s Occupation” (Pound), 130–31

Jones, Llewellyn, 50, 79

Josephson, Matthew, 215, 216

Jowett, Benjamin, 52

Joyce, James, 148, 151, 154–55, 167, 199, 221. See also Ulysses (Joyce); Ulysses trial

Kahn, Otto, 189

Kandinsky, Wassily, 65

Kannenstine, Louis, 163–64

“Karen” (Heap), 159–60

Katz, Jonathan, 55

Kaun, Alexander, 65

Kazin, Alfred, 230

Kenner, Hugh, 7

Kennerley, Mitchell, 70

Key, Ellen, 58, 59–60

Kiesler, Frederick, 217

Kime-Scott, Bonnie, 154

Kirstein, Lincoln, 204

Kuenzli, Rudolf E., 182

Kunka, Andrew, 170

Lachman, Gary, 198

Laforgue, Jules, 131

Lane, David C., 195

“Lane, George,” 80

Langner, Lawrence, 69–70

Laughlin, Clara, 22, 23, 56

Laurencin, Marie, 213–14

Lawrence, D. H., 203

Leblanc, Georgette, 5, 6, 190–91, 201, 224, 225

lesbianism

of Anderson, 29–33

in Forbidden Fires, 231

of Heap, 35–37

references to, in Little Review, 8, 157, 158–61, 237

social tensions concerning, 144–47, 149–50, 158

See also homosexuality

Leslie-Jones, Vera, 169

“Lettres Imaginaires” (Butts), 176

Levenson, Michael, 44

Levy, Edna, 18

Lewis, James R., 206

Lewis, Wyndham, 100–101

Lipsey, Roger, 10, 207

little magazines, 3, 7–8

Little Review

advertisers in, 70, 148, 246n45

All-American editions of, 139–40, 142–43, 144

anarchism and imagism in, 62, 67–69

Anderson considers ending, 188–90

Anderson’s dissatisfaction with, 93–94

Barnes published in, 161–64

beach campsite of, 69–70, 71

Bergson’s influence on, 50–51

“Blank Issue” of, 95–96, 99

Butts published in, 175–76

censorship of, 100–101, 148–49

content of, 3–4, 61

covers of, 116f, 117f, 124f, 125f, 126f, 127f

Dadaist works in, 178

debates in, 43–44

debut issue of, 41, 42–43

early contributors to, 45–46

Eliot published in, 134–36

Emerson and Whitman’s influence on, 51–52

final issue of, 127f, 220–23

financial difficulties of, 69, 70–71, 103–4

as force for modernism, 44, 156–57

founding of, 3, 17, 18–19, 23–27, 40

Freytag-Loringhoven published in, 181, 182, 183–85

Goldman and, 66–67

Goldman and Lowell and, 63

Gurdjieff followers published in, 210–13

Gurdjieff’s impact on, 188

Heap as primary editor of, 4–5, 143–44, 208, 209–23

Heap’s arrival at, 86–89

Heap’s critical articles in, 89–90

Heap’s influence on, 33

and imagism, 77–81

last issue of, 5–6

lesbian themes in, 8

and literary criticism, 44–45

Lowell and, 83, 84

Loy published in, 164–66

Machine Age Exposition (1927), 126f, 218–20

mission of, 41–42, 43

moves to New York, 96–99

Nietzsche’s influence on, 46–50

Picabia as foreign editor of, 210

Pound as foreign editor of, 128–30, 136–43

Pound returns to, 209–10

Pound’s departure from, 136, 143, 177

and Preparedness Parade bombing, 68, 94

promotion of, 86

and promotion of female modernists, 186, 237

published from San Francisco, 91–96

references to feminism in, 55–58

references to lesbianism in, 157, 158–61, 237

religiously suggestive titles in, 46

reviews of Ellis’s “The Love of Tomorrow” lecture, 54–55

Richardson published in, 166–67

Rodker as foreign editor of, 143

Russia as topic in, 64–65

significance of, 1–2

Sinclair published in, 169–72

spiritualism and contributions to, 9

Surrealism Issue, 215–16

Theatre Issue, 217–18

World War I articles in, 99–101

Yeats published in, 132–33

See also Ulysses trial

Little Review Gallery, 218

Logan, Robert Fulton, 182

Longenbach, James, 133–34

“Love—Chemical Relationship” (Freytag-Loringhoven), 181

“Love of Tomorrow, The” (E. Ellis), 54–55

Lowell, Amy, 62–63, 76–78, 80, 81–85, 86, 138, 139

Loy, Mina, 38, 156–57, 162, 164–66

MacAlmon, Robert, 38

Machine Age Aesthetics, 183, 185

Machine Age Exposition (1927), 126f, 218–20

MacLane, Mary, 158–59

Maeterlinck, Maurice, 190

Mahoney, Patrick, 190

Maitland, Cecil, 174–75

Mansfield, Katherine, 171, 201–2

Marek, Jayne, 7

marriage, companionate, 157–58

Marsden, Dora, 74

Mary Olivier (Sinclair), 170–72, 173

Mason-Hamlin, 91–92

Masses, The, 100, 101

Materer, Timothy, 80, 130, 153

McBride, Henry, 220

McCarthy, Kathleen, 24

McKay, Nellie, 212

McPherson, Aimee, 17

Mead, G. R. S., 130

Merrill, Stuart, 132

Mew, Charlotte, 85

Miller, Henry, 10, 194

Mill Valley, California, 91–93

modernism

and anarchism, 75

and Anderson and Heap’s conversion to Gurdjieff, 2, 234–35

connection between esoteric schools and, 144

debate as earmark of, 44

development of, 35

“dialogics of,” 42

little magazines and establishment of, 7–8

Little Review as force for, 44, 156–57

Lowell and, 85

Nietzsche’s influence on, 46–49

Pound on, 130, 236

as reactionary or progressive force, 137

spirituality and, 2, 9–11

Modernist Journals Project, 8

modernist magazines, 3, 7–8

modernity, 7

Moffitt, John, 180

Monroe, Harriet, 3, 26, 140–41, 185, 241n28

Morrisson, Mark S., 246n45

motherhood, 57–58

Munson, Gorham, 199, 200, 211

music, 21

“Myrrhine and Konallis” (Aldington), 160

mysticism, 10–11, 13–14, 237. See also esotericism; Gurdjieff, George Ivanovich; occultism; spiritualism

My Thirty Years’ War: Beginnings and Battles to 1930 (Anderson), 18, 19–20

Neff, Rebecca, 173

Nerval, Gerard de, 214–15

New Age, 194

Newcomb, John Timberman, 241n28

New Modernist Studies, 7–8

“New Note, The” (S. Anderson), 46

New Woman, 19

New York, 96–99, 158

Nietzsche, Friedrich, 46–50, 51, 58–59, 63, 194, 196, 235

Nietzscheans, 74

Noh plays, 134

obscenity trial. See Ulysses trial

occultism, 10–11, 64–65, 80, 130, 133–36, 153–54, 236, 252n9. See also esotericism; mysticism

Orage, A. R., 5, 135–36, 194, 199, 202, 204, 217–18, 261n32

Order of the Golden Dawn, The, 133

Orloff, Chana, 160

Orphism, 213

Ouspensky, P. D., 9–10, 65, 92, 135, 193–94, 201–2, 206, 213

“Oxen Cart and Warfare” (Toomer), 212

Paderewski, Ignacy, 89–90, 249n8

parenting, 57–58

Paris, 192–93

Partridge, M. H., 56

Pater, Walter, 44, 45, 86, 235

Peabody, Josephine Preston, 249n109

Péladan, Joséphine, 130

Periodical Studies, 8

Perloff, Marjorie, 213

Peters, Fritz, 69, 191–92, 201, 203, 260n15

Peters, Tom, 69, 191–92, 201

Picabia, Frances, 177, 210

Pilgrimage (Richardson), 166–68, 170

Platt, Susan Noyes, 183, 217

Plows-Day, Josephine, 231

Poetry, 26, 141, 185, 241n28

“Potatoes in the Cellar” (Lowell), 88–89

Potter, Rachel, 165

Pound, Ezra

analysis of French poets, 9

Anderson on, 192–93

Anderson’s correspondence with, 228

Barnes and, 161–62

on “Cantleman’s Spring-mate,” 101

critical commentary of, 130–32

on Dadaism, 177

departure from Little Review, 136, 143, 177

and Eliot, 134–36, 138

and imagism, 76–77, 78–79, 85

as Little Review’s foreign editor, 4, 128–30, 136–43

on modernism, 130, 236

and occultism, 130, 236, 252n9

and publication of Ulysses, 146

returns to Little Review, 209–10

Sinclair and, 170, 171

on typographical errors in Little Review, 104

and Ulysses trial, 151

and Yeats, 132–34

Preparedness Parade bombing (1916), 68, 94

psychoanalysis, 12–13, 29, 105, 196

Puttelis, Louis, 136

Quakerism, 168, 212

Quinn, John, 7, 101, 129, 143, 145–47, 149–50, 152, 153, 189

Rabinovitch, Celia, 214

Ray, Man, 177

Reisen, Morris, 140

Reiss, Robert, 180

Reitman, Ben, 28, 66, 73

religion, 59–60, 64, 65. See also Christianity

Reynolds, Florence, 33–36, 103, 183, 225, 227–28

Rhymers’ Club, The, 133

Ribemont-Dessaignes, G., 216

Richardson, Dorothy, 166–69, 170

Ridge, Lola, 183

Rimbaud, Arthur, 131

Roberts, E. Bechhofer, 202–3

Robertson, Michael, 52

Rocking Horse, The, 226–27

Rodker, John, 143

Romains, Jules, 131, 136

Roosevelt, Theodore, 99

“Rope, The,” 6, 228, 236

Rosenhagen-Ratner, Jennifer, 46–47

Roszak, Theodore, 13, 197, 203

Rothermere, Lady, 135

Russell, Ada Dwyer, 84

Russia, 64–65

Russian Constructivists, 220

San Francisco sojourn, 91–96

Sanger, Margaret, 3, 59, 60–61

Sanger, William, 60–61

Schenck, Celeste, 85

Schevill, Ferdinand, 37–38

Schreiner, Olive, 56

Scott, Evelyn, 183–84

Scott, Thomas, 128–29

secret societies, 11, 130, 133–34, 236

Seekers of Truth, 195

Serrure, Monique, 225, 229

sexuality

anarchism and, 72–73

Anderson on women and, 57

and influences on Anderson and Heap, 235–36

intersection of art and spirituality and, 8

of Lowell, 83–84

in Mary Olivier, 172

of Richardson, 169

spirituality and, 52–55, 59, 60

See also homosexuality; lesbianism

Sidgwick, Ethel, 45–46

Simmons, Christina, 157

Simmons, Hi, 70–71

Sinclair, May, 85, 160, 167, 169–74, 176, 258n69

Sinclair, Upton, 95

Sister Carrie (Dreiser), 23

Society for Psychical Research, 13–14

Solano, Solita, 6, 227, 229, 232, 233

Some Imagist Poets (Lowell), 80

Soupault, Philippe, 214

Sperry, Almeda, 73

spiritualism, 9, 14, 64–65, 135, 173. See also esotericism; mysticism; occultism

spirituality

of Anderson, 11, 235

of female modernists, 186–87

and Freytag-Loringhoven, 182–83, 185

intersection of art and sexuality and, 8

of Lowell, 89

modernism and, 2, 9–11

sexuality and, 52–55, 59, 60

Stearns, Mary Adams, 54

Stein, Gertrude, 156–57, 161, 221

Stirner, Max, 74, 75

“Study of Modern French Poets, A” (Pound), 131–32

Succession (Sidgwick), 45–46

Superman, 48–49, 197

Superwoman, 58–59, 172

Surette, Leon, 130

surrealism, 214–16

Swawite, Marguerite, 43

Symbolists, 34–35

Symonds, John Addington, 52–53, 244n49

Symons, Arthur, 11, 135

Tagore, Rabindranath, 89–90

Tanner, Allen, 105

Taylor, Paul Beekman, 207

Tenney, Daniel, 21

Terrinoni, Enrico, 154

Tertium Organum (Ouspensky), 193–94, 213

Thacker, Andrew, 8

theater

Heap’s interest in, 37

International Theatre Exposition, 217–18

“Thee I Call Hamlet of the Wedding Ring” (Freytag-Loringhoven), 182

Theosophy, 14, 133, 154–55

Tietjens, Eunice, 18–19, 27, 79

Tilden, Gladys, 231

Tolstoy, Leo, 65

Toomer, Jean, 211–12

transcendentalism, 14, 51

Travers, Pamela, 205

Trevor, Frances, 43

Troy, Michele, 170

Tryphonopoulos, Demetres, 252n9

Tucker, Benjamin, 72

Tzara, Tristan, 177, 215, 217

Udell, Lilian Heller, 68

Ulysses (Joyce)

and Anderson and Heap’s conversion to Gurdjieff, 9

Gurdjieff’s writings compared to, 199

obscenity test for, 254n83

occultism in, 153–54

and Pound’s departure from Little Review, 136

publication of, in Little Review, 116f, 148, 151

reactions to, 147–48

scholarship on, 254n76

See also Ulysses trial

Ulysses trial

charges filed against Anderson and Heap, 149

defense in, 150–51, 152

impact of, 4–5, 12, 188, 189

outcome of, 152–53

proceedings of, 152

and social tensions regarding lesbianism, 144–47, 149–50

Unanimism, 131

Uncanny Stories (Sinclair), 173

Upward, Allen, 130

“Vacation in Brittany” (Stein), 161

Van Gessel, Nina, 32–33

Varnhagen, Rachel, 56

Versluis, Arthur, 14–15, 244n43

Watson, J. S., 103

Webb, James, 193

Weber, Max, 13, 206

Weininger, Otto, 30, 157

Weir, David, 74, 163

Welch, Louise, 261n32

Wells, H. G., 43

Western College for Women, 21, 29–30

“Western School, The” (Jepson), 140–41

Wexler, Alice, 73

Whitman, Walt, 51, 52–53, 72–73, 235, 244n43

“Wife Has a Cow, A” (Stein), 161

Wilde, Oscar, 44, 45, 72, 85–86, 133, 235–36

Williams, William Carlos, 98, 180, 181, 182

Willis, Julia, 18

Wilson, Edmund, 11–12

Wing, Dewitt C., 26, 51–52, 69

Winning, Joanne, 169

Wisdom Tradition, 10–11

Woman and Labor (Schreiner), 56

Woolf, Virginia, 167, 174

Woolsey, John H., 254n83

Work, The (The Fourth Way), 120f, 155, 194, 195, 199, 204

World War I, 67, 84, 94, 99–101

World War II, 225–26

Wright, Frank Lloyd, 27, 202, 205–6

Yeats, William Butler, 9, 11, 85–86, 132–34, 154, 236

Zwaska, Caesar, 91

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