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Modernism

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Modernism--the breaking away from established rules, traditions, and conventions; fresh ways of looking at a human s position and function in the universe – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Modernism


1
Modernism
  • --the breaking away from established rules,
    traditions, and conventions fresh ways of
    looking at a humans position and function in the
    universe
  • - avant-garde exploration, path-finding,
    innovation, invention, something new or advanced,
    revolutionary

2
Influence of Modernism
  • Began in closing years of 19th c.
  • Had a wide influence internationally during 20th
    c.
  • Pertains to poetry, fiction, drama, painting,
    music, and architecture
  • At its most active France 1890-1940s Germany
    1890s-1920s Russia 1920s (pre-revolution)
    England 1900, 1920-30s America 1915ish-interwar
    period

3
Overview of Modernism
  • Attempted to move from the bonds of Realist
    literature
  • Introduced concepts such as disjointed timelines
    beyond classic uses of in medias res and
    flashbacks
  • Distinguished by emancipatory metanarrativea
    story about a story, encompassing and explaining
    other little stories within totalizing schemas

4
Overview of Modernism
  • Transcends the limitation of the Realist novels
    concern for social and historical change
  • View work as aesthetic object rather than
    representation of reality
  • This is largely demonstrated through the use of
    stream of consciousness writinggiving the
    written equivalent of the characters thought
    processes (through interior monologues or his /
    her sensory reactions to external occurrences)

5
Overview of Modernism
  • Also defined by its move away from
    Romanticismventuring into subject matter that is
    clearly mundane
  • Features pessimism as a clear rejection of the
    optimism in Victorian literature
  • A common motif is that of the alienated
    individual, though some works are marked by the
    absence of a central, heroic figure

6
Formal Characteristics
  • Open form/free verse
  • Discontinuous narrative
  • Intertextuality/classic allusions
  • Borrowings from other cultures and languages
  • Unconventional use of metaphor
  • Metanarrative
  • Fragmentation
  • Incoherence of character
  • Multiple narrative points of view (parallax)

7
Thematic Characteristics
  • Breakdown of social norms and cultural sureties
  • Dislocation of meaning and sense from its normal
    context
  • Valorization of the despairing individual in the
    face of an unimaginable future
  • Disillusionment
  • Rejection of history and the substitution of a
    mythical past, borrowed without chronology
  • Product of the metropolis, of cities and
    urbanscapes
  • Overwhelming technological changes of the 20th
    century
  • Loss of sense of tradition

8
The Three Amigos
  • Marx, Freud, and Darwin
  • Unsettled human subject from center of the
    universe mentality
  • Reveal dependence on laws and structures out of
    our control and sometimes completely unknown
  • Ideological uncertainty (built on lost
    civilization, loss of tradition)
  • Series of contradictions and paradoxes

9
Vs. Contemporary
  • Contemporary or Postmodern is an era (written
    after 1960)
  • Postmodernism follows most of the same ideas
    listed above
  • There are some differences simple version
  • 1.Modernist writers see fragmentation as tragic
    they also believe their works supply the needed
    coherence and unity civilization has lost
  • 2. Both are products of their time periods
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