<p>Scholars have long described modernism as &quot;heretical&quot; or &quot;iconoclastic&quot; in its assaults on secular traditions of form genre and decorum. Yet critics have paid surprisingly little attention to the related category of blasphemy--the rhetoric of religious offense--and to the specific ways this rhetoric operates in and as literary modernism. United by a shared commitment to &quot;the word made flesh&quot; writers such as James Joyce Mina Loy Richard Bruce Nugent and Djuna Barnes made blasphemy a key component of their modernist practice profaning the very scriptures and sacraments that fueled their art. In doing so they belied T. S. Eliot&#39;s verdict that the forces of secularization had rendered blasphemy obsolete in an increasingly godless century (&quot;a world in which blasphemy is impossible&quot;); their poems and fictions reveal how forcefully religion endured as a cultural force after the Death of God. More their transgressions spotlight a politics of religion that has seldom engaged the attention of modernist studies. <em>Blasphemy</em> respects no division of church and state and neither do the writers who wield it to profane all manner of coercive dogmas--including ecclesiastical as well as more worldly ideologies of race class nation empire gender and sexuality. The late-century example of Salman Rushdie&#39;s <em>The Satanic Verses</em> affords finally a demonstration of how modernism persists in postwar anglophone literature and of the critical role blasphemy plays in that persistence. <em>Blasphemous Modernism</em> thus resonates with the broader cultural and ideological concerns that in recent years have enriched the scope of modernist scholarship.</p>
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