Modernism In the arts‚ a radical break with the past and concurrent search for new forms of expression. Modernism fostered a period of experimentation in the arts from the late 19th to the mid-20th century‚ particularly in the years following World War I. In an era characterized by industrialization‚ rapid social change‚ advances in science and the social sciences (e.g.‚Darwinism‚ Freudian theory)‚ Modernists felt a growing alienation incompatible with Victorian morality‚ optimism‚ and convention
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Modernistic literature is the expression of the modern era (1901-45). It tends to revolve around themes of individuality‚ the randomness of life‚ mistrust of government and religion and the disbelief in absolute truth. Literature scholars classify the years from 1900 to about 1965 as the Modernist period. During this period‚ society at every level underwent profound changes. War and industrialization seemed to devalue the individual. Global communication made the world a smaller place. The pace
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Analysis In “Araby‚” the allure of new love and distant places mingles with the familiarity of everyday drudgery‚ with frustrating consequences. Mangan’s sister embodies this mingling‚ since she is part of the familiar surroundings of the narrator’s street as well as the exotic promise of the bazaar. She is a “brown figure” who both reflects the brown façades of the buildings that line the street and evokes the skin color of romanticized images of Arabia that flood the narrator’s head. Like the
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MODERNISM AND FEMINIST MOVEMENTS MODERNISM AT A GLANCE To aver that one’s art‚ literature‚ architecture and everything else that encompasses his cultural identity will not be let out of his grip‚ but instead will be moulded and rehashed to suit the changing landscape is what Modernism is all about. After the monstrosity of the First World War‚ followed by rapid industrialisation and technological developments becoming the carnal desires of mankind‚ Ezra Pound’s “Make it new” was a dire cry
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Modernism Course: ISLAMIC WORLDVIEW Code: UNGS 2030 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First and for all‚ we would like to express our deepest gratitude to Allah S.W.T. for giving us the strength and health to complete this assignment in time. Not to forget our beloved lecturer Bro Razak‚ who has the attitude and the substance of a genius: he continually and convincingly conveyed a spirit of adventure in regard to teaching us this subject. Without his guidance‚ this assignment would not have been possible
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Portrayal of Light and Darkness in James Joyce’s “Araby” In James’ story “Araby” the narrator creates an image in the reader’s mind of a dark and dull world where he spends his days playing and becoming infatuated with a friend’s sister. He portrays to us a dull background in order to shows us the “light” in his world of darkness. As the narrator starts his story off he paints a world that is dark by using such words as: blind‚ uninhabited‚ and detached. These words give the reader a sense
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With the dawning of the twentieth century‚ a literary movement emerged. That movement would come to be known as modernism. “On or about December‚ 1910‚ human character changed . . . All human relations have shifted— those between masters and servants‚ husbands and wives‚ parents and children. And when human relations change there is at the same time a change in religion‚ conduct‚ politics‚ and literature.”(Woolf‚ Mr. Bennett‚ 22) Modernists were the literary artists who would come to address these
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The most remarkable imagery in Joyce’s’ "Araby" is the imagery of dark and light. The whole story reads like a chiaroscuro‚ a play of light and darkness. Joyce uses the darkness to describe the reality which the boy lives in and the light to describe the boy’s imagination - his love for Mangan’s sister. The story starts with the description of the dark surroundings of the boy: his neighborhood and his home. Joyce uses these dark and gloomy references to create the dark mood and atmosphere. Later
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Peace Madueme British Literature II Mao/Tempesta 27 April 2014 Failed Expectations: The Perception of Authority in James Joyce’s “The Dead” (9) In “The Dead‚” the last short story within James Joyce’s collection of short stories‚ Dubliners‚ the author narrates the happenings during and after a dinner party that the protagonist Gabriel Conroy attends. One of the major themes that appears throughout this story and the other stories within the collection is that of failed expectation. Many characters
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“Araby” Love‚ adolescence‚ foolishness‚ and maturity are the words that describe James Joyce’s short story “Araby”. The narrator is a young boy living with his aunt and uncle in a dark‚ untidy‚ poor home in Dublin. During this time‚ this young character is facing something that opened the passage from childhood to adolescence‚ the feeling of being in love for the first time. This child‚ whose life is split between school and play with friends‚ now is deeply in love with his best friend’s sister
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