the modern age 1910-1930

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 The Modern Age  1910-1930

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Resumen modernismo

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  • The Modern Age 1910-1930

  • Historical, Social, and Cultural ForcesWorld War IBegan in 1914 Allies v. Central Powers U.S. joined war in 1917 (Lusitania) Allies won November 11, 1918 10 million soldiers died

  • Historical, Social, and Cultural ForcesRoaring Twenties U.S. soldiers returning home Booming economyJazzLate night parties FlappersProhibition Gangsters (Al Capone)

  • Historical, Social, and Cultural ForcesWomens Rights 19th Amendment passed in 1920 Better job opportunities and military opportunities

    Great Migration African Americans left the rural South for the North. Better jobs and living conditions Harlem, New York was a popular place to relocate.

  • Historical, Social, and Cultural ForcesPop Culture Automobiles (1913) Radios (1920) Movies (Talkies- 1927) Baseball (Babe Ruth)

    The Great DepressionBlack Tuesday Stock Market Crash By 1933 a quarter of the population was unemployed

  • Modern PoetryCharacteristics Make it new: break away from traditional poetryImagist movement: Direct presentation of images Breaking the rules: Ignored all writing rules

  • Modern Poetry Poets Ezra Pound T.S. EliotWilliam Carlos Williams Amy Lowell E.E. Cummings Carl Sandburg Robert Frost

  • The ImagistsImagist presented a concrete tangible image that appears frozen in time.

    Imagist method is similar to photography

  • Imagist Principles/Manifestos The image is the essence, the raw material, of poetry. Poetry should be expressed in brief, clear, concrete language that forms precise images. Images should convey poems meaning and emotion. Language should sound like simple speech. Topics should not be high-minded or poetic. No topic is unsuitable.

  • Modern FictionThe Modern American Short Story Modern writers experimented with new ways of capturing the rich complexity of human life and responded to a world that was starting over after World War I.

  • Modern FictionImportant Authors

    Sherwood Anderson Ernest Hemingway* F. Scott Fitzgerald* Henry James Katherine Anne Porter*

  • Modern Fiction Stream of Consciousness

    A reoccurring element in modern American fiction.

    William James (brother of author Henry James) an American psychologist coined the phrase in 1890. He believed that people had a constant stream of thoughts that flow through their minds without clear logic order.

  • Modern FictionStream of Consciousness Story Elements First person point of view Lack of conventional sentence structure or grammar Free associations that flow through a characters mind and link distinctly separate events. Interior monologue

  • Modern FictionThe Lost Generation Many writers left the United States during this period and established new lives in Europe. International perspective contrasted with the regionalism that dominated literature following the Civil War.

    Themes of change, indecision, and broken attachments dominate modern fiction.

  • Modern FictionFeatures of the Modern Short Story

    Understatement (de-emphasis on the importance of something or someone) Irony (contrast between appearance and reality) Stream of Consciousness Antiheroes (conflicted characters engulfed by indecision) Everyday settings Themes of instability and loss Plots without clear climax or resolution

  • Harlem Renaissance Represented the coming of age of the African American culture.

    Influenced by jazz music. The music was largely improvisational/spontaneous. Jazz inspired a an energetic social life and filled the clubs.

  • Harlem Renaissance The Neighborhood Harlem became a main destination during the great migration. It was a haven for African Americans. They were able to escape the restrictions in Harlem.

  • Important Writers Zora Neale Hurston Claude McKay * Robert Hughes Langston Hughes*Georgia Douglas Countee Cullen *

  • Claude McKay Born and educated in rural Jamaica. Won an award for his poetry in 1912. He used his prize money to come to the US- the land of opportunity. He was shocked by the racisim and violence he found in the US. His poem If We Must Die is said to be the spark that ignited the Harlem Renissance. Spent most of his life looking for ways to counter the ignoble cruelty of racism.

  • Claude McKay

  • Langston Hughes Born in Joplin Missouri in 1902Traveled around the U.S. and lived in six different cities by the time he was 12. His writing celebrated the dignity of ordinary, working-class African Americans. His poetry helped many people to look past stereotypical views of African Americans. He is considered the poet laureate of Harlem.

  • Langston Hughes