modernism: american literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

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MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

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Page 1: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

MODERNISM: American Literature

1914(?) - 1945(?)

Page 2: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

Modernism

• Was a rejection of traditional norms in society and art.

• The old ways weren’t working. Instead “make it new!”

• Brought a pessimistic view of the meaning of life and

how people are to each other.

• The search for meaning becomes more important than

the actual meaning.

Page 3: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

Causes of the Modernism

• WWI• Urbanization• Industrialization and Technology• Growth of Modern Science• Influence of Sigmund Freud and Karl Marx• Influence of Charles Darwin

Page 4: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

WWI

Page 5: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)
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URBANIZATION

Page 7: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

INDUSTRIALIZATION

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GROWTH OF MODERN SCIENCE

Scientists became aware that

• the atom was not the smallest unit of matter• matter was not indestructible• both time and space were relative to an observer’s position• some phenomena were so small that attempts at measurement would

alter them• Some outcomes could be predicted only in terms of statistical probability• the universe might be infinite in size and yet infinitely expanding

Page 9: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

Charles Darwin• While Origin of the Species was

published back in 1859, his ideas of Natural Selection and the origin of humanity are becoming the foundation of modern science and philosophy.

• Effect: If humanity is simply the product of random changes, then does life have any real purpose?

Page 10: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

SIGMUND FREUDInvented the use of psychoanalysis as a means to study one’s “unconscious”

Modernist writers concerned themselves with the inner being more than the social being and looked for ways to incorporate these new views into their writing.

Page 11: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

SHIFTS IN THE MODERN NATION

• from country to city• from farm to factory• “mass” culture (pop culture)• split between science and the literary tradition

Page 12: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

1920’s: THE JAZZ AGETo F. Scott Fitzgerald it was an “age of miracles, an age of art, an age of excess,

an age of satire.”

Page 13: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

1930’s: THE DEPRESSION“True individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and

independence. People who are hungry and out of a job are the stuff of which dictatorships are made.” – Franklin D. Roosevelt

Page 14: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

CONCERNS OF MODERNIST LITERATURE

• Question Everything

• Reject traditional norms/values

• Experiment

• Establish “NEW”

• Psychology of the Individual

• Possibilities of Communication

• Presence of the Past

Page 15: MODERNISM: American Literature 1914(?) - 1945(?)

Characteristics

• Collapsed plots• Shifts in perspective, voice, and tone• Stream-of-consciousness point of view• Comparisons and Juxtaposition• Irony and/or Satire• Allusions

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COLLAPSED PLOTS

• Begins without explanation and consists of vivid segments juxtaposed without transitions

• Suggests instead of asserts - symbols and images instead of statements.

• The reader must dig out the plot structure

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FRAGMENTARY TECHNIQUES

• Omits:– the explanations– interpretations– connections– summaries– and security in traditional literature.

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SHIFTS IN PERSPECTIVE, VOICE, AND TONE

• Often 1st person POV because “truth” does not exist objectively but is the product of a personal interaction with reality.

• To better convey the reality of confusion rather than the myth of certainty.

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STREAM-OF-CONSCIOUSNESS

• Depicts the mental and emotional reactions of characters to external events, rather than the events themselves

• Unedited thoughts

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Allusions

• Details of the past reminded readers of the old, lost coherence.

• T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land is arguably the greatest example of this allusive manner of writing; it includes a variety of Buddhist, Christian, Greek, Judaic, German and occult references, among others.