Title: The Modern Period: 1900-1950
1The Modern Period1900-1950
Nighthawks, Edward Hopper, 1942.
- Make it new!
- - Ezra Pound
2The American Dream
- Three basic principles
- America is a new Eden, a promised land of
beauty, unlimited resources, and endless
opportunities. - The American birthright is one of ever-expanding
opportunity. - Progress is a good thing, and we can
optimistically expect life to keep getting better
and better. - The independent, self-reliant individual will
triumph. - Everything is possible for the person who places
trust in his or her own powers and potential.
3THE AMERICAN DREAM, CONT.
- In your notes, write for five minutes,
connecting these three basic principles of The
American Dream to the concepts we wrote about
for our bellringer. - Begin!
- Now, lets share.
4Characteristics of Modernism
- Sense of disappointment and loss of faith in the
American dream - Rejection of traditional themes and subjects
- Rejection of the idea of a hero as perfect in
favor of a hero who is flawed and disillusioned
but shows grace under pressure
Nude Descending Staircase No.2, Marcel Duchamp,
1912.
5Characteristics of Modernism, cont.
- Interest in the inner workings of the human mind.
- Sometimes expressed through new narrative
techniques such as stream of consciousness - Emphasis on bold experimentation in style and
form - Examples
T.S. Eliot Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams
Used traditional forms to write about non-traditional themes. Used non-traditional forms to write about traditional and non-traditional themes.
6Mona Lisa, Leonardo da Vinci, 1503.
The Blue Boy, Thomas Gainsborough, 1770.
7Rejection of Traditional Forms What is art?
- In 1917, Marcel Duchamp submitted the piece to
the left (under the name R. Mutt) to an
exhibition of art which proclaimed it would
exhibit all artwork submitted. - However, after a lengthy debate among the board
members about whether or not the piece was art,
they decided not to show the piece.
Fountain, Marcel Duchamp, 1917.
8Rejection of Traditional Forms What is art?
- Controversy arose from this decision.
- One publication wrote, Whether Mr Mutt made the
fountain with his own hands or not has no
importance. He CHOSE it. He took an article of
life, placed it so that its useful significance
disappeared under the new title and point of view
created a new thought for that object (The
Blind Man).
9Part One World War I The Jazz Age
- I had a world, and it slipped away from me. The
War blew up more than the bodies of menIt blew
ideas away - - Sherwood Anderson
10Part OneWorld War I (1914-1918)
11Part OneWorld War I (1914-1918)
Dead Wounded Missing Total
USA 58,480 189,955 14,290 262,725
Britain 658,700 2,032,150 359,150 3,050,000
France 1,359,000 4,200,000 361,650 5,920,650
Germany 1,600,000 4,065,000 103,000 5,768,000
12Part OneWorld War I (1914-1918)
- America emerges as a world power.
- However, there was an increasing sense of
disillusionment creeping into American fiction. - This generation is called The Lost Generation
Soldiers with Tank.
13Part OneThe Lost Generation
- The "Lost Generation" defines a sense of moral
loss or aimlessness apparent in literary figures
during the 1920s. - World War I seemed to have destroyed the idea
that if you acted virtuously, good things would
happen.
14Part OneThe Jazz Age (The High Points)
- It had
- Jazz!
- Prohibition!
- Womens suffrage!
- Short dresses!
- Short hair (on women!)
- Drinking! (So much for Prohibition!)
- Organized crime!
- In short, people just trying to have a good time.
15Wait a minute, Mr. Lowman.
- Some of you may be asking, Didnt you tell us
the Modern Period is depressing? - It is, although you may be fooled by the veneer
of happy prosperity during the 1920s. - People were engaging in this frivolity in order
to ignore the problems in society. - Now, on with the PowerPoint.
16The Flapper
- Flappers were quite scandalous.
- They
- smoked cigarettes
- went to Jazz clubs (at night!)
- bobbed their hair
- rode bicycles
- drove cars
- drank.
- In other words, they didnt know their place as
women. - (according to society)
Louise Brooks
17The Flapper, cont.
18F. Scott Fitzgerald
- B. 1896
- Full name Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald
- Left Princeton to enlist in the US Army during
World War I however, the war ended shortly after
his enlistment. - Married Zelda Sayre in 1920.
F. Scott Fitzgerald
19F. Scott Fitzgerald, cont.
- Published four novels in his lifetime
- This Side of Paradise (1920)
- The Beautiful and Damned (1922)
- The Great Gatsby (1925)
- Tender Is the Night (1934)
- The Last Tycoon (published posthumously, 1942)
20F. Scott Fitzgerald, cont.
- Fitzgerald is viewed as being the voice of his
age. - His works are evocative of the emotional turmoil
and struggle of the post-WWI period. - D. 1940
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Carl van Vechten, 1937.
21Works Consulted
- http//www.firstworldwar.com/features/casualties.h
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