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The Modernist Credo:. Make it New-Ezra Pound. Literary Modernism. T.S. Eliot (1888-1965)The Waste Land (1922)Fragmentation of line and imageAbandonment of traditional formsSense of alienationIntense desire to find some anchor in a past that feels lostStraining and pushing of language to prov
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1. Chapter Twenty-OneBetween the World Wars The Arts of Modernism
2. The Modernist Credo: Make it New
-Ezra Pound
3. Literary Modernism
T.S. Eliot (1888-1965)
The Waste Land (1922)
Fragmentation of line and image
Abandonment of traditional forms
Sense of alienation
Intense desire to find some anchor in a past that feels lost
Straining and pushing of language to provide new meanings for an exhausted world
5. The First World War (1914-1918) and Its Significance Drastic loss of life (ten million deaths)
Sociopolitical consequences
Communism: October Revolution, rise of Soviet State
Fascism: Hitler’s National Socialist movement, fascist takeovers of Spain, Germany, Italy
Capitalism: Great Depression, American Stock Market Crash of 1929
Cultural consequences
Revolution in transportation and communication links previously isolated peoples of the world (mass produced cars, radios)
Entertainment (film, radio shows, movies as mass entertainment)
6. The Harlem Renaissance African American writers, artists, intellectuals, musicians create artworks that represent African-American self-identity
Themes of African American experience
Roots, racism, culture, religion, protest
W.E.B. Dubois; Zora Neale Hurston; Langston Hughes
African American self-identity, cultural identity, racial identity
7. Cubism Objects viewed as problems to be solved according to the artist’s vision and through his analysis
Solution to problem of how to represent three-dimensional objects in two-dimensional paintings
Break object into different planes and present as if viewed from all sides at once—hence the reference to the three-dimensions of the cube
15. In the early 20th century physicists completely change how we understand our physical world: it is neither solid, nor constant, nor entirely knowable. In a new scientific era of relativity and uncertainty, what are artists to do? 1905. Einstein publishes his simple, elegant Special Theory of Relativity, making mincemeat of his competition by relying on only two ideas: 1. The laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames, and 2. The speed of light is the same for all inertial observers.
1915. Einstein, with Hilbert in stiff competition, publishes his stunning General Theory of Relativity, and is lucky enough to be able to find observational support for his theory right away, in the perihelial advance of Mercury, and the deflection of starlight by the Sun.
1924. Louis duc de Broglie proposes the particle-wave duality of the electron in his doctoral thesis at the Sorbonne. He gets the Nobel Prize in 1929.
1927. Heisenberg discovers the Uncertainty Principle that bears his name.
1929. Edwin Hubble, with the help of his mule driver Humason, observes the redshift of distant galaxies and concludes that the Universe is expanding. The Big Bang is formulated.
1935. Young physicist Subramahnyan Chandrasekhar is attacked by famous astronomer Arthur Eddington for his report that there is a stellar mass limit beyond which collapse to what we now call a black hole is inevitable. Chandrasekhar wins the Nobel Prize in 1983 for his work on stellar evolution.
From “A Timeline of Mathematical and Theoretical Physics,” http://superstringtheory.com/history/history3.html
16. Abstract Art Art of the pure idea
Non-objective
Sense that physical sciences are undermining our confidence in the solidity of the world
20. Dadaism Marcel Duchamp
Anti-art
24. Futurism Art of speed, technology, and modernity
28. 1900: Sigmund Freud discovers the Unconscious and proposes the interpretation of dreams
29. Freud, the Unconscious, and Surrealism Interpretation of Dreams (1900)
Id, ego, superego
Dreams and the unconscious mind
Psychoanalysis as philosophy
Undermines certainty of the subject
Human and cultural behaviors
30. Surrealism art of the relative and the unconscious
31. René Magritte
33. Salvadore Dali