posted on 2022-03-13, 17:15authored byRobin A. Styles
<p>This thesis
explores formal shifts in the work of Gertrude Stein. Beginning in the Harvard
Psychological Laboratory in 1893, it traces the evolution of her artistic
approaches as her interests develop and cross the borders of psychological
investigation into the modernist fields of literary portraiture, novelistic
experimentation, and operatic performance. It seeks to understand a plurality
of influences on Gertrude Stein’s creative work and considers a multiplicity of
philosophies and ideas and individuals that have an effect on Stein’s development
as an artist, broadly categorising this plurality as the intellectual habitat
within which Stein lives and works. This thesis constructs a biography of
method, a chronological history of Stein’s developing creative practices, and
claims that her time in the Harvard Psychological Laboratory constitutes both
the beginning of this journey and a lasting influence on her life and work. The
method is procedural, and to that end the materials consulted and interrogated
come from a myriad of sources: college assignments, published psychological
studies, working notes, diaries and correspondence, multiple drafts of poems,
operatic scores, and published works in journals and books. The approach makes
extensive use of archival materials and juxtaposes sources, conducting close
readings of famous texts and then placing these alongside unknown fragments of
college work. This echoing of ideas across forms and periods is fundamental to
one of the claims of this project: that the environments Stein was a part of had
a vital and enduring effect on her artistic production. In uncovering obscure
fragments of juvenilia, conducting dynamic readings, and juxtaposing known and
unknown texts, this thesis seeks to view Stein with new eyes, and to challenge
our established understandings of her canonical texts.</p>