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THE MODERN AGE
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An epochal change Doubts and fears about society and man’s place in the Universe were confirmed; Optimistic hopes were disappointed. Traditional values were demolished by new theories: Euclidean geometry and Newtonian physics were shown to rest on false assumptions Albert Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity; Bergson and James rejected conventional ideas of time; Freud understood the importance of the irrational in determining people’s actions .
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Historical features 1870’s and 1880’s – economic depression;
By 1890 – successful modernization international competition; Competition for trade routes athmosphere of tension defensive alliances First World War (1914).
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1870’s and 1880’s – Economic Depression
Caused serious unemployment among the working class; Showed that “laissez-fair” would not necessarily produce benefits for everyone or serve the public good.
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Economic crisis’ consequences
Government’s control of the economy; State’s responsibilities in looking after poorer citizens jhgkk basis of the modern Welfare State (insurance for old-age pensions, unemployment pay and medical treatment); Marxism’s rise it offered an optimistic secure view of the future to a generation which had lost faith in the traditional virtues of liberalism and democracy.
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The First World War ( ) Turning point of the history of the world; It shocked a whole generation; It made many people lose their faith in liberal democracy, capitalism and the Victorian idea of progress; End of European domination of the world
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Victorian’s feelings The fear that had afflicted the Victorians was religious: They were afraid that man was only a superior animal, isolated in an indifferent mechanical universe, living a life without a meaning and without God; Sense of man’s isolation in a world which did not seem to obey any divine principles; The only sure point of reference that any individual had was himself, either in a limited personal relationship with God or alone; It was for him to decide what was right and wrong and to act accordingly.
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Novel in the Modern Age The sense of isolation is clear in the works of writers of the period, but it produced different responses in different cases: T. Hardy and J. Conrad were pessimists; V. Woolf, D. H. Lawrence and E. M. Forster found in personal relationship and human core a substitute for the divine love which man had lost; Hilaire Belloc, G. K. Chesterton and T. S. Eliot ignored their rational doubts and became Christians; G. B. Show and H. G. Wells found purpose and direction in trying to improve society.
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Novel in the Modern Age No set of values to which writers could confidently refer to and consequently: They left their characters to speak for themselves, without interviewing to offer an alternative point of view; Moral criticism and humorous observation on the part of the another, are completely absent in the novels.
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