Modernism PowerPoint
Modernism PowerPoint
Literature 1914-1945
Causes of the Modernist Temper
► WWI
► Urbanization
► Industrialization
► Immigration
► Technological Evolution
► Growth of Modern Science
► Influence of Austrian Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
► Influence of German Karl Marx (1818-1883)
WWI
URBANIZATION
INDUSTRIALIZATION
IMMIGRATION
Oscar Handlin states, “Once I thought to write a history of
the immigrants in America. Then I discovered that the
immigrants were American history.”
TECHNOLOGICAL EVOLUTION
GROWTH OF MODERN SCIENCE
Scientists became aware that
► Modernist writers looked inside themselves for their answers instead of seeking truth, for
example, through formal religion or the scientific presuppositions that realism and
naturalism rested upon.
► Marxism instructed even non-Marxist artists that the individual was being lost in a mass
society.
► Although Marx provided an analysis of human behavior opposed to Freud’s, both seemed
to espouse a kind of determinism that, although counter to long-standing American
beliefs in free will and free choice, also seemed better able to explain the terrible things
that were happening in the twentieth century.
► Some modern writers believed that art should celebrate the working classes, attack
capitalism, and forward revolutionary goals, while others believed that literature should
be independent and non-political.
SHIFTS IN THE MODERN NATION
► Modernist writing is marked by a strong and conscious break with tradition. It rejects traditional
values and assumptions.
► It rejects not only history but also the society of whose fabrication history is a record. Poetry tended
to provide pessimistic cultural criticism or loftily reject social issues altogether.
► Writers exhibited a skeptical, apprehensive attitude toward pop culture; writers criticized and
deplored its manipulative commercialism.
► Literature, especially poetry, becomes the place where the one meaningful activity, the search for
meaning, is carried out; and therefore literature is, or should be, vitally important to society.
Imaginative vision is thought to give access to an ideal world, apart and above reality, or to contain
alternative, higher values than those reigning in the statehouse and the marketplace, which could
enrich life. Furthermore, modernists believed that we create the world in the act of perceiving it.
CHARACTERISTICS OF MODERNIST
WRITING
► A movement away from realism into abstractions
► A deliberate complexity, even to the point of elitism, forcing readers to
be very well-educated in order to read these works
► A high degree of aesthetic self-consciousness
► Questions of what constitutes the nature of being
► A breaking with tradition and conventional modes of form, resulting in
fragmentation and bold, highly innovative experimentation
► A variety in content because with a stable external world in question,
subjectivity was ever more valued and accepted in literature
► Along with the social realist and proletarian prose of the 1920s and
1930s came a significant outpouring of political and protest poetry.
TECHNIQUES IN MODERNIST
WORKS
The modernists were highly conscious that they were being modern—that
they were “making it new”—and this consciousness is manifest in the
modernists’ radical use of a kind of formlessness.
► Collapsed plots
► Fragmentary techniques
► Shifts in perspective, voice, and tone
► Stream-of-consciousness point of view
► Associative techniques
COLLAPSED PLOTS
► It will seem to begin arbitrarily, to advance without explanation, and to
end without resolution, consisting of vivid segments juxtaposed
without cushioning or integrating transitions.
► It will suggest rather than assert, making use of symbols and images
instead of statements.
► Prose writers strove for directness, compression, and vividness. They were
sparing of words. The average novel became quite a bit shorter than it had
been in the nineteenth century.
► Modern fiction tends to be written in the first person or to limit the reader to
one character’s point of view on the action. This limitation accorded with the
modernist sense that “truth” does not exist objectively but is the product of a
personal interaction with reality. The selected point of view was often that of
a naïve or marginal person—a child or an outsider—to convey better the reality
of confusion rather than the myth of certainty.
STREAM-OF-CONSCIOUSNESS
► Stream-of-consciousness is a literary practice that attempts to depict the
mental and emotional reactions of characters to external events, rather than
the events themselves, through the practice of reproducing the unedited,
continuous sequence of thoughts that run through a person’s head, most
usually without punctuation or literary interference.
► 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.
IMAGISM
► Includes an eclectic group of English and American poets working between
1912 and 1917 including Ezra Pound, Amy Lowell, and William Carlos Williams.
► It was a reaction against a prevailing cultural romanticism which encouraged
social optimism concerning the ultimate perfectibility of humankind and which
led, in turn, to art that imagists believed was soft and weakly expressive.
► The imagists aimed to strip away poetry’s tendency toward dense wordiness
and sentimentality and to crystallize poetic meaning in clear, neatly juxtaposed
images.
► Ezra Pound defines the image in almost photographic terms as “that which
presents an intellectual and emotional complex in an instant of time. . . . It is
the presentation of such a “complex” instantaneously which gives that sense of
sudden liberation; that sense of freedom from time limits and space limits; that
sense of sudden growth, which we experience in the presence of the greatest
works of art.”
► Early influences on the imagists included the symbolist poets, classical Greek
and Roman poetry, and Chinese and Japanese verse forms, in particular the
haiku, or hokku.
SYMBOLISM
► Symbolists were a group of French poets who were active during the last thirty
years of the 19th century.
► Symbolism in France began as a revolt against the cold impersonality of the
realistic novel and its minute descriptions of an objective, external reality. The
rebel poets turned inward, in order to explore and express the shifting, subtle
states of the human psyche. They believed that poetry should evoke and
suggest, raising itself above the level of objective description only; hence, they
sought poetic techniques that would make possible the recreation of human
consciousness. The symbol and the metaphor enabled them to suggest
mysterious and inexpressible subjective emotion. Often the symbols were
highly personal, and their use resulted in obscure, esoteric verse. At its finest,
however, symbolist poetry achieved a richness of meaning and created an
awareness of the mystery at the heart of human existence.
► As symbolism sought freedom from rigidity in the selection of subject matter,
so it desired to free poetry from the restrictions of conventional versification.
The art that seemed most to resemble poetry was not that of sculptured
precision of plastic forms but music; fluid melody and delicate lyricism
characterized symbolist poetry.
► During the 20th century the use of symbolism became a major force in British
literature. T. S. Eliot adapted it in the development of his individual style and
praised it in his criticism.
► The most outstanding development of symbolism was in the art of the novel.
Works Cited
► Baym, Nina, ed. The Norton Anthology of American Literature. New
York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1998.
► Harmon, William, and C. Hugh Homan, eds. A Handbook to Literature.
New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1996.
► Kimmelman, Burt, ed. The Facts on File Companion to 20th Century
American Poetry. New York: Facts on File, Inc., 2005.
► Lathbury, Roger. American Modernism (1910-1945): American
Literature in its Historical, Cultural, and Social Contexts.
Backgrounds to American Literature Series. New York: Facts On
File, Inc., 2006.
► Siepmann, Katherine Baker, ed. Benét’s Reader’s Encyclopedia.
New York: Harper-Collins Publishers, Inc., 1948.