SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  8
DEFINE “MODERN.”
•

•

•

•

•
MODERNISM
•   Literary and
    artistic movement
•   Provided radical
    breaks with the
    conservative and
    traditional values
    of realism
•   Characterized by a
    series of cultural
    shocks               Sixth Avenue Elevated at Third Street (1928) by John Sloan
CHARACTERISTICS OF MODERNISM
• Rejected traditional ways
• Promoted experimentation and individualism
• Attack on the notions of hierarchy/class/race
• Preoccupation with the inner self and consciousness
• Disillusionment and loss of faith and innocence
• Rejection of the ideal hero in favor of a realistically flawed
  hero
• Optimism in response to cynicism and alienation
• “Unreliable” narrator in many novels
• Stream-of-consciousness
COMPARING MODERNISM TO THE PAST

 PRE-MODERN WORLD       MODERN WORLD

• Ordered           • Chaos
• Meaningful        • Pessimistic
                    • Unstable
• Optimistic
                    • Loss of Faith
• Stable            • Collapse of
• Clear sense of      Morality/values
  identity          • Confused sense of
                      identity and place
• Faith               in world
• Morality/values
TIMELINE: 1900-1950
• 1905: Einstein formulates theory of relativity
• 1906: Earthquake and fire ravage San Francisco
• 1912: Titanic sinks
• 1914: Panama Canal opens
• 1914: WWI beings in Europe
• 1917: U.S. enters WWI
• 1920: 19th Amendment grants U.S. women the right
  to vote
• 1927: Charles Lindberg completes first transatlantic
  solo flight
TIMELINE: 1900-1950
• 1927: The Jazz Singer opens
• 1929: U.S. stock market crashes (The Great
  Depression)
• 1939: WWII begins when Germany invades Poland
• 1941: U.S. enters WWII after Japanese attack on
  Pearl Harbor
• 1945: Germany and Japan surrender
• 1945: United Nations forms
• 1950: Korean war begins
• 1950: U.S. population is about 151 million
WRITERS TO REMEMBER
•   William Carlos Williams   •   F. Scott Fitzgerald
•   Jack London               •   John Steinbeck
•   Willa Cather              •   William Faulkner
•   Robert Frost              •   Edgar Lee Masters
•   Edna St. Vincent Millay   •   Zora Neale Hurston
•   T.S. Eliot                •   Arthur Miller
•   James Joyce               •   Tennessee Williams
•   Ernest Hemingway
•   Langston Hughes

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Victorian literature ‫‬
Victorian literature ‫‬Victorian literature ‫‬
Victorian literature ‫‬
Mohammed Raiyah
 
Modernism and modern poetry
Modernism and modern poetryModernism and modern poetry
Modernism and modern poetry
Madiha Habeeb
 
The life of virginia woolf
The life of virginia woolfThe life of virginia woolf
The life of virginia woolf
minjichiaracho
 

Tendances (20)

Modernism in Literature
Modernism in Literature Modernism in Literature
Modernism in Literature
 
VICTORIANISM VS MODERNISM
VICTORIANISM VS MODERNISMVICTORIANISM VS MODERNISM
VICTORIANISM VS MODERNISM
 
General characteristics of 20th century
General characteristics of 20th centuryGeneral characteristics of 20th century
General characteristics of 20th century
 
Victorian literature ‫‬
Victorian literature ‫‬Victorian literature ‫‬
Victorian literature ‫‬
 
History of victorian age
History of victorian ageHistory of victorian age
History of victorian age
 
New criticism
New criticismNew criticism
New criticism
 
The Restoration And The 18th Century
The Restoration And The 18th CenturyThe Restoration And The 18th Century
The Restoration And The 18th Century
 
Victorian literature
Victorian literatureVictorian literature
Victorian literature
 
Victorian Era
Victorian Era Victorian Era
Victorian Era
 
History of 20th english literature
History of 20th english literatureHistory of 20th english literature
History of 20th english literature
 
South asian literature
South asian literatureSouth asian literature
South asian literature
 
The Victorian Age
The Victorian AgeThe Victorian Age
The Victorian Age
 
History of literary criticism
History of literary criticismHistory of literary criticism
History of literary criticism
 
Puritan age
Puritan agePuritan age
Puritan age
 
Modernism and modern poetry
Modernism and modern poetryModernism and modern poetry
Modernism and modern poetry
 
The life of virginia woolf
The life of virginia woolfThe life of virginia woolf
The life of virginia woolf
 
An overview of the history of romantic period
An overview of the history of romantic periodAn overview of the history of romantic period
An overview of the history of romantic period
 
Show:The origin and Development of Novel and The Major Novelists of The Neo –...
Show:The origin and Development of Novel and The Major Novelists of The Neo –...Show:The origin and Development of Novel and The Major Novelists of The Neo –...
Show:The origin and Development of Novel and The Major Novelists of The Neo –...
 
New Historicism
 New Historicism New Historicism
New Historicism
 
The 19th Century Literature
The 19th Century LiteratureThe 19th Century Literature
The 19th Century Literature
 

Similaire à Introduction to Modern Literature 1900-1950

Victoria: Leninism
Victoria: LeninismVictoria: Leninism
Victoria: Leninism
jtrip
 
Modernism and world war i
Modernism and world war iModernism and world war i
Modernism and world war i
alexmorton
 
Timeline and Characteristics of British Literature
Timeline and Characteristics of British LiteratureTimeline and Characteristics of British Literature
Timeline and Characteristics of British Literature
Javier Aguirre
 
Picture of Dorian Gray Context
Picture of Dorian Gray ContextPicture of Dorian Gray Context
Picture of Dorian Gray Context
kadams26
 
American Romanticism Movement
American Romanticism MovementAmerican Romanticism Movement
American Romanticism Movement
Villa Santa Maria
 
United States History Ch. 11 Section 4 Notes
United States History Ch. 11 Section 4 NotesUnited States History Ch. 11 Section 4 Notes
United States History Ch. 11 Section 4 Notes
skorbar7
 

Similaire à Introduction to Modern Literature 1900-1950 (20)

American literature
American literatureAmerican literature
American literature
 
The world in 1900
The world in 1900The world in 1900
The world in 1900
 
5 AMERICAN LITERATURE.pptx
5 AMERICAN LITERATURE.pptx5 AMERICAN LITERATURE.pptx
5 AMERICAN LITERATURE.pptx
 
5 AMERICAN LITERATURE.pptx
5 AMERICAN LITERATURE.pptx5 AMERICAN LITERATURE.pptx
5 AMERICAN LITERATURE.pptx
 
Victoria: Leninism
Victoria: LeninismVictoria: Leninism
Victoria: Leninism
 
Modernism and world war i
Modernism and world war iModernism and world war i
Modernism and world war i
 
Timeline and Characteristics of British Literature
Timeline and Characteristics of British LiteratureTimeline and Characteristics of British Literature
Timeline and Characteristics of British Literature
 
Modernism
ModernismModernism
Modernism
 
Introduction to Modernism
Introduction to ModernismIntroduction to Modernism
Introduction to Modernism
 
Introduction to Anglo-American Literature Grade 9 students
Introduction to Anglo-American Literature Grade 9 studentsIntroduction to Anglo-American Literature Grade 9 students
Introduction to Anglo-American Literature Grade 9 students
 
Picture of Dorian Gray Context
Picture of Dorian Gray ContextPicture of Dorian Gray Context
Picture of Dorian Gray Context
 
History of English period. Brief summary
History of English period. Brief summary History of English period. Brief summary
History of English period. Brief summary
 
30 The Culture of the Early Republic
30 The Culture of the Early Republic30 The Culture of the Early Republic
30 The Culture of the Early Republic
 
Presentation on Victorian Age of English Literature.pdf
Presentation on Victorian Age of English Literature.pdfPresentation on Victorian Age of English Literature.pdf
Presentation on Victorian Age of English Literature.pdf
 
American Romanticism Movement
American Romanticism MovementAmerican Romanticism Movement
American Romanticism Movement
 
ENGLISH AND AMERICAN LITERATURE
ENGLISH AND AMERICAN LITERATUREENGLISH AND AMERICAN LITERATURE
ENGLISH AND AMERICAN LITERATURE
 
The Romantic Age.pptx
The Romantic Age.pptxThe Romantic Age.pptx
The Romantic Age.pptx
 
United States History Ch. 11 Section 4 Notes
United States History Ch. 11 Section 4 NotesUnited States History Ch. 11 Section 4 Notes
United States History Ch. 11 Section 4 Notes
 
European Literature Day 1
European Literature Day 1European Literature Day 1
European Literature Day 1
 
jeffreygad.pdf
jeffreygad.pdfjeffreygad.pdf
jeffreygad.pdf
 

Introduction to Modern Literature 1900-1950

  • 1.
  • 3. MODERNISM • Literary and artistic movement • Provided radical breaks with the conservative and traditional values of realism • Characterized by a series of cultural shocks Sixth Avenue Elevated at Third Street (1928) by John Sloan
  • 4. CHARACTERISTICS OF MODERNISM • Rejected traditional ways • Promoted experimentation and individualism • Attack on the notions of hierarchy/class/race • Preoccupation with the inner self and consciousness • Disillusionment and loss of faith and innocence • Rejection of the ideal hero in favor of a realistically flawed hero • Optimism in response to cynicism and alienation • “Unreliable” narrator in many novels • Stream-of-consciousness
  • 5. COMPARING MODERNISM TO THE PAST PRE-MODERN WORLD MODERN WORLD • Ordered • Chaos • Meaningful • Pessimistic • Unstable • Optimistic • Loss of Faith • Stable • Collapse of • Clear sense of Morality/values identity • Confused sense of identity and place • Faith in world • Morality/values
  • 6. TIMELINE: 1900-1950 • 1905: Einstein formulates theory of relativity • 1906: Earthquake and fire ravage San Francisco • 1912: Titanic sinks • 1914: Panama Canal opens • 1914: WWI beings in Europe • 1917: U.S. enters WWI • 1920: 19th Amendment grants U.S. women the right to vote • 1927: Charles Lindberg completes first transatlantic solo flight
  • 7. TIMELINE: 1900-1950 • 1927: The Jazz Singer opens • 1929: U.S. stock market crashes (The Great Depression) • 1939: WWII begins when Germany invades Poland • 1941: U.S. enters WWII after Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor • 1945: Germany and Japan surrender • 1945: United Nations forms • 1950: Korean war begins • 1950: U.S. population is about 151 million
  • 8. WRITERS TO REMEMBER • William Carlos Williams • F. Scott Fitzgerald • Jack London • John Steinbeck • Willa Cather • William Faulkner • Robert Frost • Edgar Lee Masters • Edna St. Vincent Millay • Zora Neale Hurston • T.S. Eliot • Arthur Miller • James Joyce • Tennessee Williams • Ernest Hemingway • Langston Hughes