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Putting Modernism Together - Literature, Music, and Painting, 1872-1927 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,340
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Putting Modernism Together - Literature, Music, and Painting, 1872-1927 (Hardcover)
Series: Hopkins Studies in Modernism
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How do you rationally connect the diverse literature, music, and
painting of an age? Throughout the modernist era-which began
roughly in 1872 with the Franco-Prussian War, climaxed with the
Great War, and ended with a third catastrophe, the Great
Depression-there was a special belligerence to this question. It
was a cultural period that envisioned many different models of
itself: to the Cubists, it looked like a vast jigsaw puzzle; to the
Expressionists, it resembled a convulsive body; to the Dadaists, it
brought to mind a heap of junk following an explosion. In Putting
Modernism Together, Daniel Albright searches for the center of the
modernist movement by assessing these various artistic models,
exploring how they generated a stunning range of creative work that
was nonetheless wound together aesthetically, and sorting out the
cultural assumptions that made each philosophical system
attractive. Emerging from Albright's lectures for a popular Harvard
University course of the same name, the book investigates different
methodologies for comparing the evolution and congruence of
artistic movements by studying simultaneous developments that
occurred during particularly key modernist years. What does it
mean, Albright asks, that Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness,
published in 1899, appeared at the same time as Claude Debussy's
Nocturnes-beyond the fact that the word "Impressionist" has been
used to describe each work? Why, in 1912, did the composer Arnold
Schoenberg and the painter Vassily Kandinsky feel such striking
artistic kinship? And how can we make sense of a movement,
fragmented by isms, that looked for value in all sorts of under- or
ill-valued places, including evil (Baudelaire), dung heaps
(Chekhov), noise (Russolo), obscenity (Lawrence), and triviality
(Satie)? Throughout Putting Modernism Together, Albright argues
that human culture can best be understood as a growth-pattern or
ramifying of artistic, intellectual, and political action. Going
beyond merely explaining how the artists in these genres achieved
their peculiar effects, he presents challenging new analyses of
telling craft details which help students and scholars come to know
more fully this bold age of aesthetic extremism.
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