Title: Heart of Darkness, pages 165565
1Heart of Darkness, pages 1655-65
- Type one perfect paragraph expressing the main
idea of assigned reading. - Sentence One should express the main idea of the
assigned reading - Subsequent sentences should defend your position
- Three examples, quotations, and comments
- Total number of sentences should be at least 12.
- Write paragraphs in Secure-exam . . . Do not
exit until told to do so . . .
2Heart of Darkness Quiz (Part II)
- Wednesday, March 14
- Content
- Heart of Darkness, mainly part II
- Modernism Lecture notes
- Sartres Existentialism (Yellow Sheet)
- Two short hand-written essay (you will prepare
a 3x5 note card with quotations) - Discuss how Africa and Africans are depicted by
Marlow in the novel Heart of Darkness. Are the
depictions racist or not? - Discuss the concepts of violence and cruelty in
the novel. Offer specific examples and explain
why the concepts are used ironically in the
novel.
3Introduction to Concepts of Modernism
- The Word "Modern" comes from the latin word
"MODO - Modo means "Just Now
- Humans have thought of themselves as "modern" for
centuries - 20th Century Modernism has particular innovations
4Whats Modern? The Shock of the Old
- Around 1127, the Abbot Suger began reconstructing
his abbey basilica of St. Denis in Paris. - The look was neither classically Greek nor Roman
but new
5The Classically Greek
- Notice the Rational approach to Architecture
- Columns suggest simplicity, elegance, strength,
and symmetry
6St. Denis and Opus Modernum
- Suger referred to the new work in Latin, as Opus
Modernum, meaning A Modern Work - Style later became known as Gothic
- Notice Flying Buttresses for support and tall
Spires
7Renaissance Response to the Gothic or Modern
- The Ideal Style of Renaissance architects and
artists was, again, classical Greek - Gothic was a term of abuse, meaning a northern
or German Barbaric Style - Greek, they said, was antica e buona maniera
moderna - (The ancient and good modern style)
- Symmetry, Geometry, Stability
8The Term Modern in the 20th century
- The Problem with the Term Modern is
- Man has always viewed himself as modern
- The Term means just now (the moment of the
present) - What is 20th century Modernism
9The Twentieth CenturyModernisms and Modernity
- Most Unique characteristic of Twentieth
Century Modernism -
-
- Inquires how we know what we know
- FOCUS ON EPISTEMOLGY
-
10 What is Modernism
- Like the Enlightenment
- Modernism employed the tools of REASON and
SCIENTIFIC investigation - Like the Enlightenment
- Modernism uncovered structures of Natural
Universe (How stuff works)
11Central Image of ModernismAssembly line
- Rational Dissection of Labor (how stuff works)
- Is a scientific dissection of labor (mechanical
processes)
12Modernisms departure from the Enlightenment
- Unlike Enlightenment
- Modernism also confronted the possibility that
knowledge was not fixed or stable. - Enlightenment rationality sought eternal Truths
(see Newton) - Modernism suggests Knowledge depends upon
perspective - Perspective necessarily suggests difference
and subjectivity - subjectivity rejects Objective, Purely
Empirical, Universal Absolutes
13How does Assembly Line reflect Modernism in Art?
- An object, seen from various points of view,
could be reconstructed using particular separate
"views" which overlapped and intersected
Cubism in a nutshell
14BIG IDEA!
- Modernism as Cultural idea is the logical
extension of the Enlightenment - Assembly Line Production
- Modern Advances in Technology (car, plane,
telephone) - Modernism as Philosophical and Artistic Concept
rejects Enlightenment notion of Objectivity
15What do these statements mean?
- Modernity is a philosophical interrogation of
what it means to have a perspective - Writers and Artists strive to express this
uncertainty - Well . . . Paul Cezanne!
16Paul Cezanne (1839-1906)
- Paul Cezzanne essentially started modern
painting - Did not entirely scrap realism
- Cezanne wanted to paint not reality but the
effect of perceiving it.
17Paul Cezanne
- Cezanne suggested uncertainty in viewing
- A tree changes as my gaze changes
- Cezanne sought to simplify perception, saying
painters should treat nature like the cylinder,
the sphere, the cone - Cezanne introduces the notion of nature being
reducible to geometrical basics
18Braque, Georges The Fruitdish
- Figure to Left Realistic depiction of
still-life - Figure to Right Modern depiction of still-life
19Modern Art The Basics
- Art that does not pretend to mirror the world
(mimesis) - Does not aim at representing Truth as it exists
outside the book or mind (verisimilitude) - Aims at depicting the Experience of Living in a
faster, more information based 20th century - Aims at revealing how the world is Created from
several perspectives/truths/points of view
20Painting vs. Mass Production
- Often argued, invention of photography made
painting obsolete - Mass production (photography) replaced
hand-crafted originality (painting) - Digital Photos makes the issue even more clear .
. . Endless perfect reproductions
21Modernism vs. Modernity
- Modernity means
- Mass produced Goods
- Assembly line
- New Modes of Transport
- auto-mobile, airplane, underground train
- New media
- Film, photography, telephone, tape-recorder
- Effect of Modernity
- Ready made and in-expensive goods
- Rise of Consumerism (choice)
- New concept of Space / Time
- kaleidoscopic collage of sights
- Loss of idea of separate spaces / Fragmentation
- New methods for reproducing reality
22Modernisms response to Modernity
- -- Tries to create new visions of reality
(experience of modernity) - Tries to capture the Essence of Thought and
ReasonStream of consciousnessdiscontinuous
thought - Inserts Unreliable narrators in the place of
omniscient narrators
23The First Truly Modernist Painting (1907)
- Picassos Les Demoissels d Auvignon
- Prostitutes with African Masks
- Cubist Style
- Fear of Syphilis
- Anti-representational
- Representation Art deemed Obsolete
- Naturalistic Themes (Primitive)
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2619th Century Beliefs
- Developments in science encouraged people to
believe they would conquer all secrets of
Universe - Faith in Progress and Rational solutions to
all problems - Belief that Technology would Serve humanity,
not Master it.
27Crucial 19th Century Thinkers
- Charles Darwin (1809 1882)
- Examined the evolution of species according to
Material Evidence - Did not refer to Divine Laws or Purpose
- Suggested Natural Laws such as Natural
Selection
28Crucial 19th Century Thinkers
- Auguste Comte (1798-1857)
- Father of Positivism and Sociology
- Important figure in concept of Social Darwinism
- colonized people were less evolved, colonizing
people were more evolved. - Cultural Difference / Perspective was not a
consideration - Twentieth Century Thought Observes Bias in
so-called Scientific rationality.
29Crucial 19th Century Thinkers
- Karl Marx (1818-1883)
- Created a scientific view of History
- Believed all History moved in Economic stages
- Feudalism
- Capitalism
- Socialism
- Communism
- Viewed Modern Workers as Alienated cogs in
great industrialized machine - Workers no longer owned their labor
- Wages and loss of craft
30Crucial 19th Century Thinkers
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)
- Strong opponent of Positivism
- Focused on the Individual, not Society
- Advocated Ubermensch
- Superhuman being who refuses notions of Social or
Scientific Law - Rejects Christianity, Faith in Science, and
Loyalty to the State - Focuses on Complete Freedom in a world which
lacks transcendental law
31Summary Questions
- Why would Nietzsche be influential to twentieth
century modernism? - How was Comte influenced by Darwin?
- How was Nietzsche perhaps influenced by Darwin?
- What is the distinguishing characteristic of
modernism? - How does Braques The Fruitdish illustrate
modernisms concern with Perspective and its loss
of faith in Stable Knowledge?