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Chapter 28 The Age of Anxiety

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Title: Chapter 28 The Age of Anxiety


1
Chapter 28The Age of Anxiety
  • Uncertainty in Modern Thought
  • Modern Art and Music
  • Movies and Radio
  • The Search for Peace and Political Stability
  • The Great Depression, 1929-1939

2
Uncertainty in Modern Thought
  • Most people believed in progress, reason,
    individual rights rational human mind
    science 1880s-1920s
  • 1880s thru 1920s some serious thinkers and
    artists. optimist thinking of times
  • WWI influenced intellectuals who believed mankind
    violent, irrational animals
  • French poet critic Paul Valery expressed this
    uncertainty in work saw Europe looking at
    future w/ dark foreboding

3
Modern Philosophy
  • Freidrich Nietzsche rejected Christianity
    argued West overemphasized rationality stifled
    passion/animal instinct that drive creativity
    Most famous line God is dead, murdered by
    Christians who no longer believe in him
  • Henri Bergson believed immediate
    experience/intuition as important as
    rational/scientific thinking for understanding
    reality
  • Georges Sorel rejected democracy said
    socialism would come to power through a huge
    general strike of all working people this would
    shatter capitalism

4
Logical Empiricism
  • Logical empiricism rejected most traditional
    philosophy from existence of God to meaning of
    happiness.
  • Ludwig Wittgenstein argued in his Tractatus
    Logico-Philosophicus in 1922 that philosophy
    logical clarification of thoughts so it is study
    of language (which expresses thoughts)
  • Great issues of ages God, freedom, morality
    waste of time since it cannot be tested by
    science/math. Statements only reflect personal
    preferences opinions. Of what one cannot
    speak, of that one must keep silent.

5
Existentialism
  • Existentialism analysis of existence meaning
    of life is through free will, choice personal
    responsibility
  • Most existentialists were atheists Influenced by
    shattering of beliefs in God, reason, progress
    (WWI)
  • Jean Paul Sartre Being and Nothingness (1943),
    Existentialism is a Humanism (1945) believed
    individuals must give meaning to life through
    actions
  • Albert Camus refused the label of existentialist
    but is linked w/ this mode of thought. Wrote
    essay The Rebel, a novel, The Stranger. Camus
    believed in Socialism, against marriage, won
    Nobel peace prize for his writings against
    capital punishment

6
The Revival of Christianity
  • Post WWI thinkers/theologians tried to revitalize
    fundamentals of Christianity
  • Believed humans sinful, imperfect need Gods
    forgiveness
  • Leading Christian existentialists Soren
    Kierkegaard (19th cent) who rejected formalistic
    religion committed to remote/majestic God
  • Karl Barth sought to re-create religious
    intensity of Reformation. Religious truth is
    made through Gods grace

7
The New Physics
  • Progressive minds accepted Darwinian concept of
    evolution and believed science based on hard
    facts controlled experiments
  • New physics believed atoms fast moving
    particles (electrons protons)
  • Marie Curie radium emits sub-atomic particles
    does not have constant atomic weight
  • Max Planck showed in 1900 that subatomic energy
    is emitted in uneven spurts (quanta) not steady
    stream
  • Albert Einstein undermined Newtonian physics
    further w/ idea that time space relative to
    viewpoint of observer only speed of light is
    constant theory of special relativity

8
Freudian Psychology
  • Sigmund Freud human behavior irrational.
  • Key to understanding mind is primitive irrational
    unconscious called the id which is driven by
    pleasure seeking desires
  • The id is constantly at battle with other parts
    of mind. The rationalizing conscious part is ego.
  • The ego mediates what a person can do, while the
    superego, is driven by what a person should do
    (deeply ingrained moral values)

9
Twentieth-Century Literature
  • Intellectual climate of pessimism, relativism,
    alienation also expressed in literature
  • Novelists used stream of consciousness technique
    to explore psyche (Virginia Wolf, James Joyce)
  • Writers such as Marcel Proust, James Joyce,
    William Faulkner wrote about complexity
    irrationality of human mind

10
Art and Entertainment
  • Cubism concentrated on a complex geometry of
    zigzagging lines and sharply angled, overlapping
    planes

Guernica (1937)
11
Non-representative Art
  • Dadaism "Dada" was a nonsensical word that
    mirrored a post-WWI world that no longer made
    sense.
  • Attacked all accepted standards of art and
    behavior, delighting in outrageous conduct

Marcel Duchamp
12
Surrealism
  • influenced by Freud's emphasis on dreams

Dalis The Persistence of Memory
13
Movies
  • Moving pictures were first shown as a popular
    novelty in peepshows and penny arcades in the
    1890s, especially in Paris.
  • Motion pictures became the main entertainment of
    the masses until after WWII.
  • Motion pictures, like radio, became powerful
    tools of indoctrination, esp. in countries with
    dictatorial regimes.

14
DEMOCRACIES IN THE 1920S
15
I. Weimar Republic
  • The Social Democratic Party (S.P.D.) took control
    of the government on November 9, 1918
  • Fear of communist revolutions throughout the
    country prompted Party Leader Philip Scheidemann
    to proclaim an republic, but without official
    consent from any other parties.

16
Threats from the Left
  • Germanys lack of experience with democratic
    traditions made the Weimars hold on power
    tenuous
  • The Weimar Republic had to rely on conservative
    military groups to save it from communist
    outbreaks throughout the country
  • The govt was given support by the military
    provided that the govt maintain discipline in
    the army and root out Bolshevism
  • In effect, the Weimar govt became a prisoner of
    the German army
  • Freikorps vs. Spartacists

17
Treaty of Versailles, 1919
  • To Germans of all political parties, the
    Versailles Treaty represented a harsh, dictated
    peace, to be revised or repudiated as soon as
    possible.
  • France was eager to punish Germany (but even more
    eager to ensure its future security against
    German aggression)
  • England believed a healthy German economy was
    essential to a healthy British economy (John
    Maynard Keynes Economic Consequences of the
    Peace, 1919)
  • Conservatives, including influential military
    elements, saw the signing of the treaty as a
    stab in the back or the diktatthe dictated
    peace

18
New Constitution created in August 1919
  • Reichsrat upper chamber represented the Federal
    states.
  • Reichstag lower house elected by universal
    suffrage supplied the Chancellor and Cabinet.
  • President elected for a 7-year term.
  • Female suffrage granted
  • Kapp Putsch, 1920
  • Ruhr Crisis, 1923
  • Beer Hall Putsch, 1923
  • Dawes Plan, 1924

19
rejoined the world community of nations
  • Locarno Pact, 1925 Germany and other European
    nations agreed to settle all disagreements
    peacefully.
  • Germany allowed to join League of Nations in 1926
  • Kellogg-Briand Pact, 1928 Renounced war as
    "illegal" except for self-defense signed by 62
    nations but had no real enforcement mechanism

20
II. France economic problems
  • Challenges were similar to those in Germany
  • Death, devastation, and debt of WWI created
    economic chaos and political unrest
  • Throughout the 1920s, the governments
    multi-party system was dominated by parties on
    the right (conservatives) - Supported status quo
    and had backing of business, army, and Church

21
III. Great Britain
  • Wartime trend toward greater social equality
    continued, helping maintain social harmony.
  • Representation of the Peoples Act (1928) women
    over 21 gained the right to vote.
  • Yet, the concentration of wealth in Britain was
    more geared towards the top than any other
    European country
  • Top 1 owned 2/3 of the national wealth

22
Growth of social welfare
  • Labour party rose as a champion of the working
    classes and of greater social equality
  • Conservatives regained power by framing the
    Labour party as pro-communist when it officially
    recognized the Soviet Union
  • Stanley Baldwin (1867-1947) ruled Britain between
    1924 and 1929. Was a conservative
  • Showed the same compromising spirit on social
    issues female suffrage, expanded pensions to
    widows, orphans and the elderly.

23
The Irish Question
  • After Easter Rebellion (1916) the extremist Sinn
    Fein faction gained prominence in Ireland.
  • Prompted a civil war between the Irish Republican
    Army (IRA) and the Black and Tan, Englands
    special occupation forces there.
  • October 1921, London created the Irish Free
    State, from which Ulster withdrew, as part of the
    British Commonwealth (Northern Ireland)
  • In 1922, Britain granted southern, Catholic
    Ireland full autonomy after failing to suppress a
    bitter guerrilla war.

24
The Great Depression (1929-1933)
  • Long-term problems within the U.S. economy
  • Overproduction of agriculture in Europe
  • Stock Market Crash
  • Hawley-Smoot Tariff
  • bankers began recalling loans made to Germany and
    other European countries
  • Impact on Europe
  • Shattered the fragile optimism of political
    leaders in the late 1920s
  • Decline of production occurred in every country
    (except Russia with its command economy).
  • Mass unemployment resulted Germany hit hardest
    (43) Britain 18, U.S. 25

25
Attempted remedies
  • New Deal- Keynesian approach
  • Scandinavia's response to depression was most
    successful under its socialist gov't
  • British recovery
  • abandoned gold-standard, reorganized industry,
    increased tariffs, reformed finances, cut govt
    spending, balanced budget (although unemployed
    workers received barely enough welfare to live
    on)
  • Economy recovered considerably after 1932.

26
With France
  • Impact of the depression didnt occur immediately
    as France wasn't as highly industrialized as
    Britain, Germany the US
  • The depression increased class tensions and gave
    birth to a radical right that supported govt
    reorganization along fascist lines.
  • Popular Front Threat of fascism prompted
    coalition of republicans, socialists, communists
    and radicals
  • Popular Front led by Leon Blúm
  • French New Deal failed
  • France remained politically divided as Germany
    continued its rearmament in late 1930s
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