Title: The Age of Anxiety
1The Age of Anxiety
2Europe in 1919
3Uncertainty in modern thought
- Effects of WWI
- Intellectual crisis
- In philosophy, psychology, literature, etc.
- Questioned liberal beliefs that had guided
intellectuals since the Enlightenment - Rejected
- progress reason
- existence of a knowable orderly Newtonian
society - Philosophers (writers)
- Attacked optimism of pre-1914
- Noted irrational and violent element of human
behavior - Paul Valérys Crisis of the Mind (p. 922)
- Wrote about the crisis of the cruelly injured
mind - Claimed war ("storm") had left a "terrible
uncertainty"
Valery is noted for his ruthless and harshly
realistic depictions of Weimar society and of the
brutality of war
4Modern philosophy
- Traditional belief in progress and the rational
human was attacked by Nietzsche, Bergson, and
Sorel before 1914 - Friedrich Nietzsche
- believed that Western civilization was in decline
- Weakened by Christianity
- Slave Morality which praised humility, the weak
- W. Civ overstressed rational thinking at the
expense of emotion and passion
5Nietzsche God is dead. Western Christians no
longer really believed N. believed that a few
superior supermen had to become the leaders of
the herd of inferior people Very influential
among German radicals (later influenced Hitler)
6Modern philosophy
- Logical empiricism
- claimed that philosophy was nothing more than the
logical clarification of thoughts, language - Called for
- Moral, ethical, religious questions are not
"cognitively meaningful" because they can not be
proven - could not answer the great issues of the ages
such as the meaning of life
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein
7- Existentialism
- stressed that humans can overcome the
meaninglessness of life by individual action - individuals create the meaning and essence of
their lives, as opposed to deities or authorities
creating it for them - Absence of a transcendent force (such as God)
means that the individual is entirely free, and,
therefore, ultimately responsible. - Up to humans to create an ethos of personal
responsibility outside any branded belief system - Most famous were French existentialists, Sartre
and Camus, who became big only after WW II
8The revival of Christianity
- Christianity under attack since Enlightenment
- Before WWI theologians tried harmonize religious
belief with scientific - A revitalization of fundamental Christianity took
place after World War I - Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855) revived
- criticized the worldliness of the church and
stressed commitment to a remote and majestic God
9Karl Barth (1886-1968) stressed the imperfect and
sinful nature of man Man can not reason out
Gods ways T.S. Eliot, C.S. Lewis other
literary figures were caught in in revival Graham
Green One began to believe in heaven because one
believed in hell.
10The new physics
- Pre-1920 physics was based on a Newtonian
weltanschauung - World machine
- Planck and Einstein undermined belief in constant
natural laws - Plank
- work with subatomic energy showed that atoms
were not the basic building blocks of nature - Einstein
- EMC2
- postulated that time and space are relative
- They can be altered (curved) with energy
- the universe is infinite
- matter and energy are interchangeable
Prof. Albert Einstein, Princeton U.
11Rutherford Atom was not smallest, solid
matter Identified subatomic particles
(neutron) new physics instead of Newton's
rational laws, there are only tendencies The
world was not a perfect predictable harmonious
machine!!!!
12Freudian psychology
- Prior to Freud, it was assumed that the conscious
mind processed experiences in a rational and
logical way. - According to Freud, human behavior is basically
irrational. - The key to understanding the mind is the
irrational unconscious (the id), which is driven
by sexual, aggressive, and pleasure seeking
desires.
13Freud Behavior is a compromise between the needs
of the id and the rationalizing conscious (the
ego), which mediates what a person can do, and
ingrained moral values (the superego), which tell
what a person should do. Instinctual drives can
easily overwhelm the control mechanisms yet
rational thinking and traditional moral values
can cripple people with guilt and neuroses. Many
interpreted Freudian thought as an encouragement
of an uninhibited sex life.
Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
14Twentieth century literature
- The postwar moods of pessimism, relativism, and
alienation influenced novelists. - Literature focused on the complexity and
irrationality of the human mind - Writers such as Proust embraced psychological
relativity--the attempt to understand oneself by
looking at one's past - Novelists such as Woolf, Faulkner, and Joyce
adopted the stream-of-consciousness technique, in
which ideas and emotions from different time
periods bubble up randomly - Some literature, such as that of Spengler, Kafka,
and Orwell, was anti-utopia--it predicted a
future of doom.
15Modern painting
- French impressionism replaced with to
non-representational expressionism - sought to portray the worlds of emotion and
imagination - Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cézanne, and Matisse
Vincent van Gogh Starry Night 1889
Paul Gauguin Tahitian Women On the Beach)
1891
16Themes in Early Modern Art
- Uncertainty/insecurity.
- Disillusionment.
- The subconscious.
- Overt sexuality.
- Violence savagery.
17Edvard Munch The Scream (1893)
Expressionism
- Using bright colors to express a particular
emotion.
18Franz Marc Animal Destinies (1913)
19Gustav Klimt Judith I (1901)
Secessionists
- Disrupt the conservative values of Viennese
society. - Obsessed with the self.
- Man is a sexual being, leaning toward despair.
20Gustav Klimt The Kiss (1907-8)
21Georges Braque Violin Candlestick (1910)
CUBISM
- The subject matter is broken down, analyzed, and
reassembled in abstract form. - Cezanne ? The artist should treat nature in terms
of the cylinder, the sphere, and the cone.
22Georges Braque Woman with a Guitar(1913)
23Pablo Picasso Les Demoiselles dAvignon (1907)
24Picasso Studio with Plaster Head (1925)
25Pablo Picasso Guernica (1937)
26George Grosz Grey Day(1921)
DaDa
- Ridiculed contemporary culture traditional art
forms. - The collapse during WW I of social and moral
values. - Nihilistic.
27George Grosz The Pillarsof Society(1926)
28Raoul Hausmann ABCD (1924-25)
29Marcel Duchamp Fountain (1917)
30Marcel Duchamp Nude Descending a Staircase(1912)
31Salvador Dali Soft Construction with Boiled
Beans (Premonition of Civil War), 1936
Surrealism
- Late 1920s-1940s.
- Came from the nihilistic genre of DaDa.
- Influenced by Feuds theories on psychoanalysis
and the subconscious. - Confusing startling images like those in dreams.
32Salvador Dali The Persistence of Memory (1931)
33Salvador Dali The Apparition of the Face and
Fruit Dish on a Beach (1938)
34Salvador Dali Geopoliticus Child Watching the
Birth of a New Man (1943)
35Walter Gropius Bauhaus Building (1928)
Bauhaus
- A utopian quality.
- Based on the idealsof simplified formsand
unadornedfunctionalism. - The belief that the machine economy could deliver
elegantly designed items for the masses. - Used techniques materials employed especially
in industrial fabrication manufacture ? steel,
concrete, chrome, glass.
36Walter Gropius Lincoln, MA house (1938)
37Charlie Chaplin The Tramp
38Movies and radio
- The general public embraced movies and radio
enthusiastically. - The movie factories and stars such as Mary
Pickford, Lillian Gish, Douglas Fairbanks,
Rudolph Valentino, and Charlie Chaplin created a
new medium and a new culture. - Movie going became a form of escapism and the
main entertainment of the masses.
39Radio, which became possible with Marconi's
"wireless" communication and the development of
the vacuum tube, permitted transmission of speech
and music, but major broadcasting did not begin
until 1920. Then every country established
national broadcasting networks by the late
1930s, three of four households in Britain and
Germany had a radio. Dictators and presidents
used the radio for political propaganda. Movies
also became tools of indoctrination In Germany,
Leni Riefenstahls Triumph of the Will propaganda
film for Hitler
40The Mass Media
41The search for peace and political stability
- The search for peace was difficult Germany hated
the Treaty of Versailles, France was fearful and
isolated, Britain was undependable, and the
United States was not interested. Besides,
Eastern Europe was in ferment and the
international economy was disrupted and poor. - Yet, from 1925 to late 1929, it appeared that
peace and stability were within reach. But the
collapse of the 1930s ended that quest.
42Germany and the Western powers
- Germany was the key to lasting peace, and the
Germans hated the Treaty of Versailles. - France believed that an economically weak Germany
was necessary for its security and wanted massive
reparations to repair devastated northern France.
- Britain needed a prosperous Germany in order to
maintain the British economy. - J. M. Keynes, an economist, argued that the
Versailles treaty crippled the European economy
and needed revision. - His attack on the treaty contributed to guilt
feelings about Germany in Britain. - As a result, France and Britain drifted apart.
43Germany and the Western powers
- When Germany refused to continue its heavy
reparations payments, French and Belgian armies
occupied the Ruhr (1923). - The Germans stopped work in the factories, and
France occupied the German Rhineland this left
many Germans unemployed. - Inflation skyrocketed prices soared and savings
were wiped out. - Resentment and political unrest among the Germans
grew many blamed the Western governments, and
some blamed the Jews and communists. - Under Stresemann, Germany agreed to revised
reparations payments, and France agreed to
re-examine Germany's ability to pay. - Stresemann represented a new compromising mood in
both Germany and France.
44Hope in foreign affairs (1924-1929)
- The Dawes Plan (1924) provided a solution to the
reparations problem the United States lent money
to Germany so it could pay France and Britain so
they could pay the United States. - In 1929, the Young Plan further reduced German
reparations. - The treaties of Locarno (1925) eased European
disputes. - Germany and France accepted their common border.
- Britain and Italy agreed to fight either France
or Germany if either country invaded the other. - Germany joined the League of Nations in 1926.
- The Kellogg Briand Pact (1928) condemned war, and
the signing states agreed to settle international
disputes peacefully.
45Hope in democratic government
- The Ruhr crisis saw the emergence of the radical
right under Hitler his beer hall plot failed,
but he set out his theories in Mein Kampf. - But after 1923, democracy took root in Germany as
the economy boomed. - However, there were sharp political divisions in
the country. - The right consisted of nationalists and
monarchists. - The communists remained active on the left.
- Most working-class people supported the socialist
Social Democrats.
46- In France, the democratically elected government
rested in the hands of the middleclass oriented
moderates, while communists and socialists
battled for the support of the workers. - Northern France was rebuilt, and Paris became the
world's cultural center. - Britain's major problem was unemployment, and the
government's efforts to ease it led the country
gradually toward state sponsored welfare plans. - Britain's Labour party, committed to revisionist
socialism, replaced the Liberals as the main
opposition party to the Conservatives. - Labour, under MacDonald, won in 1924 and 1929,
yet moved toward socialism gradually.
47The Great Depression (1929-1939)
- The depression of 1929-1939 was worldwide and
long lasting--and it caused many to turn to
radical solutions. - The economic crisis
- The depression began with the American stock
market crash (October 1929). - Net investment in factories and farms fell while
share prices soared. - Many investors and speculators had bought stocks
on margin (paying only a small part of the
purchase price and borrowing the rest from their
stockbrokers). - When prices started to fall, thousands of people
had to sell their shares at once to pay their
brokers, and a financial panic started.
48Financial crisis led to a decline in production,
first in the United States and then in Europe,
and an unwise turn to protective tariffs. The
absence of international leadership and poor
national economic policies added to the
depression. Mass unemployment As production
decreased, workers lost their jobs and had no
money to buy goods, which cut production even
more. Mass unemployment also caused great social
and psychological problems.
49The Scandinavian response to Depression
- Backed by a strong tradition of community
cooperation, socialist parties were firmly
established in Sweden and Norway by the 1920s. - Deficit spending to finance public works and
create jobs was used to check unemployment and
revive the economy after 1929. - Scandinavia's welfare socialism, though it
depended on a large bureaucracy and high taxes,
offered an appealing middle way between
capitalism and communism or fascism in the 1930s.
50Recovery and reform in Britain and France
- Britain's concentration on its national market
aided its economic recovery--so that by 1937
production had grown by 20 percent. - Government instability in France prevented
recovery and needed reform. - The Socialists, led by Blum, became the strongest
party in France, and his Popular Front government
attempted New Deal-type reforms. - France was drawn to the brink of civil war, and
Blum was forced to resign (1937), leaving the
country to drift aimlessly.