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Guiding Questions What are several key characteristics of literary modernism? What were the effects of these influential factors? What are several historical, social, and cultural forces that prompted the modernist movement?
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“The greatest single fact about our Modern American Writing is our writers’ absorption in every last detail of their American world together with their deep and subtle alienation from it.” –Alfred Kazin American Modernism
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Modernism 1915-1945 Reaction to WW1 Response to a sense of social breakdown Development of Cubism & Surrealism in the visual arts International perspective on cultural matters
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The Jazz age and The Great Depression Investigation of the excesses of the “Roaring 20s” Consideration of class and trauma as raised by the Great Depression
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View of the world as “fragmented” The usual connective patterns are missing: morals and frameworks are compromised. Artist’s self-consciousness about questions of form and structure. Stylistic innovations, disruption of traditional syntax and form.
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Changes in thought Pre-Modern World (e.g., Romantic, Victorian Periods) Modern World (early 20th century) OrderedChaos MeaningfulFutile OptimisticPessimistic StableUnstable FaithLoss of Faith Morality/ValuesCollapse of Morality/Values Clear Sense of IdentityConfused Sense of Identity and Place in World
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Philosophy & Theory A brief overview of the intellectual current which influenced Modernism
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Darwinism Charles Darwin Evolution (prolematic) Displacement of the human position of privilege Collapsing of boundaries between human and animal
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Existentialist Philosophy Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche Economic & Psychological Determinism No Divine Patterns Search for Meaning War & Spiritual Trauma
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Freudian Theory Sigmund Freud Psychoanalysis Psychological Determinism Forces inside the self impact human behavior Sexuality & Repression lead to Aggression
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Marxism Karl Marx Economic Determinism Forces outside the self impact human behavior Class Struggle Relationship between labor and capitol
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Modernism as a Movement
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Painting Sprit of experimentation New ways of seeing New material New Ideas about the function of art Abstraction
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“Report from Rockport” Stuart Davis
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Sculpture Addition: disparate objects and materials Construction: involuntary sculpture Abstract Stylized Minimalist
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Architecture Materials and functional requirements determine the results (form follows function) Adoption of the machine aesthetic Rejection of ornament Simplification of form
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Music Sound-based composition; noise, factory, mechanical, speech Extended techniques and sounds Expansions on/abandonment of tonality
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Sciences Quantum Theory Theory of Relativity Treatment of light and color Treatment of energy Treatment of time and space
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Themes of Modern Literature Collectivism vs. Individualism Anxiety regarding the past Historical discontinuity (disconnection) Disillusionment Violence & Alienation
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Decadence & Decay Loss & Despair Breakdown of social norms and cultural sureties Race & Gender relations Sense of place, local color
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Characteristics of Modernism Formal Experimentation Free indirect discourse: a style of third-person narration which combines some of the characteristics of third person report with first-person speech. Passages written using free indirect speech are often ambiguous as to whether they convey the views, feelings and thoughts of the narrator or those of the character the narrator is describing. This allows a flexible and sometimes ironic interaction of internal and external perspectives.
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Stream of Consciousness Narration: a narrative mode which seeks to portray an individual’s point of view by giving the written equivalent of the character’s thought processes, either through loose interior monologue or in connection to action.
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Tensions within Modern Literature Democratic impulse Anti-traditionalism Celebration of international culture Free expression of sexual and political matters Technology as liberation Revolution Elitist impulse Traditionalism National jingoism & provinciality Puritanical and repressive elements Fear of technological advancement Conservatism
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The Modern Self The chief characteristic of the self is alienation The “Lost Generation” (Gertrude Stein) “Dissociation of Sensibility” (T.S. Eliot) The “Dream Deferred” (Langston Hughes)
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The modern self is often unable to act, feel, or express love The modern self has a tormented recollection of the past
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Major Authors
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John Dos Passos Critique of materialism in early works Literature includes fragments of pop songs, news headlines, stream- of-consciousness, monologues, naturalistic fragments from the lives of a horde of unrelated characters.
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T.S. Eliot The most dominant literary figure between the two world wars. Influential poet and literary critic. Conceives of the poem as an object demanding a fusion and concentration of intellect, feeling, and experience.
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F. Scott Fitzgerald Focus on Jazz Age & Great Depression Examination if American Materialism Exploration of the American Dream
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Nathaneal West Satirizes American Society Collapse of the American Dream Investigation of Material Culture
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Gertrude Stein Expatriate Author Coined the term “Lost Generation” Patron of authors and artists as well as artistic innovator
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William Faulkner Southern American writer Many works center on the mythical Yoknapatawpha county Experimental techniques include stream-of- consciousness and dislocation of narrative time.
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Ernest Hemingway Iceberg Theory of literature (one-eighth above water) Spare, tight journalistic prose style Objective, detached point of view Examination of masculinity, gender
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Exit Ticket What do you look forward to learning/reading in this unit? Explain. 3-4 sentences.
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