Title: ... his conversion was 'Ash Wednesday' (1930), a religiou
1Camelia Elias
American Studies
2background
- Causes of World War 1
- Militarism
- Imperialism
- Alliance System
- Nationalism
3history
- 1914
- JUNE 28
- Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated
- JULY 28
- Russia declared war on Serbia
- AUG 3
- Germany declared war on France
- 1915
- FEB 18
- Germany began its attempted blockade of Britain
- APR 22
- The Germans were the first to use poisoned gas
- MAY 23
- Italy declared war on Austria Hungary
4- 1916
- JUNE 4
- Russia began an offensive in eastern Galicia
(Poland) - AUG 27
- Italy declared war on Germany
- SEPT 15
- The British army makes use of tanks
- 1917
- FEB 1
- Germany began unrestricted submarine warfare
- APR 6
- The US declared war on Germany
- NOV 7
- The Bolsheviks seized power in Russia
- DEC 9
- Jerusalem fell to the Allies
51918
- JUNE 15
- Austria- Hungary fought its last offense
- JUNE 23
- The Allies occupied Murmansk, Russia
- NOV 9
- Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany abdicated
- NOV 11
- Germany signed an armistice
6modernism
- began somewhere bet. 1850 and 1915
- ended between 1914 and 1950
- it was a movement only in retrospect
7influences
- late capitalism
- dominated by industrialization and technology
- shaken by WWI
- spiritual climate
- ambivalent, exhilarating and exalting because of
humankinds increasing momentum and endless
prospects - frustrating and alienating because of the
discrepancy between the human spirit and
technological civilization
8modernist expressions
- modernist art is at once an expression of and
protest against the process of modernization - a willingness (even desire) to challenge peoples
preconceived notions about art, values, life in
order to shake them up - anti-modern, anti-urban, anti-industrial,
anti-progress, anti-traditional middle-class
values
9double perspectives
- dualist view
- optimism/pessimism
- confidence/feelings of doom
- irrationality/intellectualism
- chaos/order
10Victorianism/American realism
- belief in
- predictable universe presided over by a
benevolent God - the universe is governed by immutable natural
laws - humankind arrives at a unified and fixed set of
truths - insistence on preserving absolute moral standards
based on the distinction between human/animal
11modernist reactions
- restructuring fragmented concepts
- merging things previously held to be mutually
exclusive - manifested in paradox, cinematic montage
- breaking up Victorian binary systems
- shift toward the belief that subject and object
are linked and that the subject cannot see,
describe, or transmit an object without changing
it
12modernist beliefs
- findings of natural and human sciences are
universally and timelessly true - science is inherently progressive
- the workings of the mind can be scientifically
revealed - aesthetic judgments are radically individual
13modernist beliefs
- root justification of moral judgments must be
scientific - works of art are self-contained worlds
- personal identity is refashioned out of
experience - art is the principal vehicle for fashioning
meaning in a world where meaning must be
constantly re-created
14Philosophy
- a fundamentally new conception of time
- eternity rejected in favor of here and now
- MAKE IT NEW
15writing strategies
- prioritize space (spatial form) over time-bound
narrative - use of allusion and verbal collage as a result of
attempting a radical compression of time - collapse meaning into a moment of time
16characteristics 1
- attempts to efface the author
- emphasis on identity
- locating or recovering the essential self
- split between inner and outer self
- objective reality exists, but is distorted by
subjectivity
17characteristics 2
- depiction of individual consciousness
- attempt at new realism
- detachment
- irony
- fragmentation of perception
- cosmopolitanism
18characteristics 3
- technology
- urbanism
- predominance of metaphor
- elimination of omniscient narrator
- stream of consciousness
- the unconscious
- emphasis on connotation over denotation
19reaction of modernist writers
- take in the objectives of existing sciences
- distinguish new objects which belong to a
potentially scientific domain or have the truth
value of disinterested natural description - largely abandon any pretension to primary truth
20Freuds influence (1856-1939)
- sharp opposition between conscious surfaces and
unconscious depths - heavy influence of the unconscious
- psychoanalysis stresses the common foundation of
all cultures
21e.e. cummings
22C. Brâncusi The Kiss (1908 other version 1916)
23(No Transcript)
24Matisse, Le Luxe (1907)
25Gertrude Stein(1874-1946)
26biographical info
- born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania to a family of
well-educated German-Jewish immigrants. - 1902 - moved to France during the height of
artistic creativity gathering in Montparnasse. - 1903-1912 - lived in Paris with her brother Leo,
who became an admired art critic. - 1907 - Stein met her lifelong partner, Alice B.
Toklas - after the success of her memoir "The
Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas" in the mid
1930s, Stein became rich in her own right. - she and her brother compiled one of the first
collections of Cubist and modern art.
27Stein Alice B. Toklas
28Rue de FleurusBeinecke Rare Book and Manuscript
Library, Yale University
29Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose
The Lost Generation
Pablo Picasso Portrait of Gertrude Stein (1906)
30The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, 1933
-
- They always say . . . that my writing is
appalling but they always quote it and what is
more, they quote it correctly. . . . My sentences
do get under their skin, only they do not know
that they do.
31Everybodys Autobiography, 1937
- I was very much interested to know just what
they know about what is good publicity and what
is not. Harcourt was very surprised when I said
to him on first meeting him in New York remember
this extraordinary welcome that I am having does
not come from the books of mine that they did
understand like the Autobiography but the books
of mine that they did not understand.
32Stein, interview 1934
- People today like contemporary comforts, but
they take their literature and art from the past.
They are not interested in what the present
generation is thinking or painting if it doesnt
fit the enclosure of their personal
comprehension. Present day geniuses can no more
help doing what they are doing than you can help
not understanding it, but if you think we do it
for effect and to make a sensation, youre crazy.
Its not our idea of fun to work for thirty or
forty years on a medium of expression and have
ourselves ridiculed.
33Stein, interview 1930
- Lack of popular success in America is the last
of my worries. I am working for what will endure,
not a public. Once you have a public you are
never free. No one who is ever to be really great
succeeds until he is past forty, be he inventor,
painter, writer or financial genius. - All this foolishness about my writing being
mystic or impressionistic is so stupid. . . .
Just a lot of rot. I write as pure, straight,
grammatical English as any one, more accurate,
grammatically than most. There isnt a single one
of my sentences that a school child couldnt
diagram. - New York World
34Transatlantic Interview, 1946
- Picasso said, You see, the situation is
very simple. Anybody that creates a new thing has
to make it ugly. The effort of creation is so
great, that trying to get away from the other
things, the contemporary insistence, is so great
that the effort to break it gives the appearance
of ugliness. Your followers can make it pretty,
so generally followers are accepted before the
master. The master has the stain of ugliness. The
followers who make it pretty are accepted. The
people then go back to the original. They see the
beauty and bring it back to the original.
35The Making of Americans (1925)
- FORM
- move toward abstraction ? privilege the spatial
over the narrative form - rhythms of repeated experience (write what you
know) - dissolution of plot, character and mimesis
- rigorous control of material through authorial
consciousness - formal demands
- dismissal of the noun
- ignore the sentence
- produce abstraction
- revolutionize the Word
36content
- derives a principle of contemporaneity rather
than developing sequence - gives importance to the method rather than the
subject - poetics is more important than subject
matter/theme - devotion to the nature of sensation and relation
within the work itself - emphasize authorial consciousness
37(No Transcript)
38American Modernism was also a form of regionalism
(literary key figure ex. William Faulkner)
Grant Wood American Gothic (1930)
39T.S. Eliot, 1955.The Granger Collection, New
York City
40biographical info (1888-1965)
- American-English poet, playwright, literary
critic, and editor - a leader of the modernist movement in poetry in
such works as The Waste Land (1922) and The Four
Quartets (1943) - exercised a strong influence on Anglo-American
culture from the 1920s until late in the century - experimented with diction, style, and
versification and thus revitalized English poetry - in a series of critical essays he shattered old
orthodoxies and erected new ones - the publication of The Four Quartets led to his
recognition as the greatest living English poet
and man of letters - in 1948 he was awarded both the Order of Merit
and the Nobel Prize for Literature
41early years
- descended from a distinguished New England family
- His family allowed him the widest education
available in his time, with no influence from his
father to be practical and to go into business - entered Harvard in 1906 he received a B.A. in
1909, after three instead of the usual four years - the men who influenced him at Harvard were George
Santayana, the philosopher and poet, and the
critic Irving Babbitt. - From Babbitt he derived an anti-Romantic attitude
- 190910 he was an assistant in philosophy at
Harvard
42early years 2
- spent the year 191011 in France, attending Henri
Bergson's lectures in philosophy at the Sorbonne
and reading poetry with Alain-Fournier - the poetry of Dante, of the English writers John
Webster and John Donne, and of the French
Symbolist Jules Laforgue helped him to find his
own style - 1911-1914 back at Harvard reading Indian
philosophy and studying Sanskrit - 1914 he met and began a close association with
the American poet Ezra Pound
43early publications
- Eliot was to pursue four careers editor,
dramatist, literary critic, and philosophical
poet. - he was probably the most erudite poet of his time
in the English language. - his undergraduate poems were literary and
conventional. - his first important publication, and the first
masterpiece of modernism in English, was The
Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.
44Alfred J. Prufrock
- Let us go then, you and I,When the evening is
spread out against the skyLike a patient
etherized upon a table. . . . - Ezra Pound had printed privately a small book, A
lume spento, as early as 1908, but Prufrock was
the first poem by either of these literary
revolutionists to go beyond experiment to achieve
perfection.
45Prufrocks significance
- represented a break with the immediate past as
radical as that of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and
William Wordsworth in Lyrical Ballads (1798). - the appearance of Eliot's first volume, Prufrock
and Other Observations, in 1917, marks the date
of the maturity of the 20th-century poetic
revolution.
46comparisons
- the significance of the revolution is still
disputed, but the striking similarity to the
Romantic revolution of Coleridge and Wordsworth
is obvious Eliot and Pound, like their
18th-century counterparts, set about reforming
poetic diction. - Wordsworth thought he was going back to the real
language of men - Eliot struggled to create new verse rhythms based
on the rhythms of contemporary speech - Eliot sought a poetic diction that might be
spoken by an educated person, being neither
pedantic nor vulgar.
47poetics
- the poet-critic must write programmatic
criticism - criticism that expresses the poet's own interests
as a poet, quite different from historical
scholarship, which stops at placing the poet in
his background
48Tradition and the individual talent (1920)
- tradition, as used by the poet, is not a mere
repetition of the work of the immediate past
(novelty is better than repetition) - rather, it comprises the whole of European
literature from Homer to the present
49the objective correlative
- The only way of expressing emotion in the form
of art is by finding an objective correlative
in other words, a set of objects, a situation, a
chain of events which shall be the formula for
that particular emotion such that, when the
external facts, which must terminate in sensory
experience, are given, the emotion is immediately
evoked.
50Eliot's theory of the objective correlative
- used the phrase objective correlative in the
context of his own impersonal theory of poetry - had an immense influence toward correcting the
vagueness of late Victorian rhetoric by insisting
on a correspondence of word and object
51later criticism
- Dante (1929)
- Thoughts After Lambeth (1931)
- The Idea of a Christian Society (1939)
- Notes Towards the Definition of Culture (1948).
-
- whether a work is poetry must be decided by
literary standards whether it is great poetry
must be decided by standards higher than the
literary
52Dante (1929)
- Eliot's criticism and poetry are so interwoven
that it is difficult to discuss them separately - the essay on Dante appeared two years after Eliot
was confirmed in the Church of England (1927) - in 1929 he also became a British subject
53philosophical and religious phase
- the first long poem after his conversion was Ash
Wednesday (1930), a religious meditation in a
style entirely different from that of any of the
earlier poems - Ash Wednesday expresses the pangs and the
strain involved in the acceptance of religious
belief and religious discipline
54later poetry and plays
- Eliot's masterpiece is The Four Quartets
- it was issued as a book in 1943, though each
quartet is a complete poem. - the first of the quartets, Burnt Norton, had
appeared in the Collected Poems of 1936. - it is a subtle meditation on the nature of time
and its relation to eternity.
55The Four Quartets (1943)
- Each of the poems was self-subsistent
- but when published together they were seen to
make up a single work - themes and images recurred and were developed in
a musical manner and brought to a final
resolution.
56 57The Waste Land , 1922
- Thematics
- the poem expresses the disenchantment,
disillusionment, and disgust of the period after
World War I - a series of vignettes, loosely linked by the
legend of the search for the Grail - they portray a sterile world of panicky fears and
barren lusts, and of human beings waiting for
some sign or promise of redemption
58style
- highly complex
- erudite
- allusive
- Eliot provided notes and references to explain
the work's many quotations and allusions - exhibits meta-awareness
- relies on intertextuality
59form content
- the use of paratext (esp. footnotes and the wide
range of literary references) interferes with the
intended content - rendering of the universal human predicament of
man desiring salvation - the manipulation of language
- mastering of the poetic phrase
- metrics
- modulations ranging from the sublime to the
conversational
60structure
- five sections
- proceeds on a principle of rhetorical
discontinuity that reflects the fragmented
experience of the 20th-century sensibility of the
great modern cities of the West - expresses the hopelessness and confusion of
purpose of life in the secularized city, the
decay of urbs aeterna (the eternal city). - structure ? concretizes the theme of hopelessness
and decay - esp. through the poem's constant rhetorical
shifts and its juxtapositions of contrasting
styles
61unified theme
- The Waste Land is not a simple contrast of the
heroic past with the degraded present - it is rather a timeless, simultaneous awareness
of moral grandeur and moral evil