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And when you read the word 'Modernism,' what is the first thing you think of? Is it perhaps to do with the beginning part 'Modern'?
This text will give a brief introduction to Modernism. So let's start at the beginning: what is Modernism?
Modernism Definition
Modernism is a literary and artistic movement that began in the late 19th century and departed from previous traditional and classical forms of art and literature. It is a global movement where creatives radically produced new imagery, mediums, and means to best portray modern life. The movement not only was embraced by literature but art, music, architecture and other fields of thinking.
Modernism rejected all the movements that became before it, arguing that these forms of representation no longer adequately reflected the new forms of society.
The key points of Modernism are:
Many creatives broke from traditional forms of writing as they did not best reflect the struggles and issues of society.
Modernism grew out of a critical turning point in nearly every area of civilisation; it is marked by profound shifts in human perception.
This was a time of increasing internalisation of narration in literature, with aspects such as stream of consciousness, rejection of narrative continuity, and non-linear chronology.
Modernism Time Period
Modernism was born out of a time of great societal upheaval caused by industrialisation, modernisation and the first World War.
War
WW1 (1914–1918) shattered the concept of progress to many, resulting in fragmentation in both content and structure. The ideals of the Enlightenment claimed that new technology would bring progress to humans: technological advances would improve society and quality of life. Yet this was destroyed by WW1, as technological advances simply increased the mass destruction of life. The war resulted in the disillusionment of society and a deep pessimism of human nature; themes picked up by Modernism such as in the poem 'The Waste Land' (1922) by T. S. Eliot.
The Enlightenment is an intellectual movement in the 17th and 18th centuries that focused on scientific progress, rationalism and the pursuit of knowledge.
Industrialisation & Urbanisation
By the beginning of the twentieth century, the western world was using various inventions of the Industrial Revolution, such as the automobile, aeroplane and radio. These technological innovations challenged traditional notions of what was possible in society. Modernists could see the whole of society being transformed by machines.
Yet the Industrial Revolution and resulting urbanisation and industrialisation also led to significant social and economic inequalities. Many modernist authors such as Franz Kafka and T. S. Eliot explored the effects of these events on the population and the disillusionment and sense of loss people experienced.
The mass urban movement meant that the city became the key context and reference point for both human nature and humans. As a result, the city often starred as the main character in modernist texts.
Industrialisation is the development of economies from agricultural to industrial.
Urbanisation is the mass movement of people from the countryside to cities.
Characteristics of Modernism in Literature
The tremendous social upheavals brought everything into doubt that was once fixed. The world was no longer reliable and set. Instead, it became slippery and dependent on one's perspective and subjectivity. Requiring new models to express this uncertainty, Modernism is characterised by experimentation in form, multi-perspectives, interiority and non-linear timelines.
Experimentation
Modernist writers experimented with their writing styles and broke with previous storytelling conventions. They went against narrative conventions and formulaic verse by writing fragmented stories to represent the state of society after great upheavals.
Ezra Pound's 'Make it new!' statement in 1934 about the Modernist movement emphasises the role of experimentation. This slogan was an attempt to encourage writers and poets to be innovative in their writing and experiment with new writing styles.1
Modernist poets also rejected traditional conventions and rhyme schemes and started to write in free verse.
Free verse is a poetic form that does not have a consistent rhyme scheme, musical form or metrical pattern.
Subjectivity & Multi-Perspectives
Modernist texts are characterised by a growing mistrust of language to be able to reflect reality. Modernist writers rejected the neutrality and objectivity of third-person omniscient narrators often used in Victorian literature.
An omniscient narrator is a narrator that has an all-knowing insight into the narrative that is being told (namely, is privy to all the thoughts and emotions of the characters).
A third-person narrator is a narrator that is outside the story (namely, is not present as a character).
Instead, Modernist writers embraced subjective language dependent on perspective.
From a neutral, object perspective, a red apple is simply a red apple. Yet, in subjective texts, this red apple is perceived through the narrator, who will see and describe this apple from their own subjective perspective. Maybe for one narrator, the red apple is actually deep oxblood red, whereas the red apple appears to be light pink for another narrator. So the apple will change depending on who is perceiving it.
Yet if reality changes depending on who perceives it, how can we really trust what we see? And what even is the reality in this new slippery world?
Modernist texts tried to deal with these questions by using new narrative perspectives, which became increasingly fragmented and turned inward into the characters.
Many Modernist writers wrote in the first-person but with different characters to present each character's individual thoughts and add complexity to the story. This multi-perspectival narration used several different viewpoints to present and evaluate a novel.
A first-person narrator is a narrator that is inside the text (a character in the story). The story is filtered through their perspective. An example is Nick Carraway in The Great Gatsby (1925).
Multi-perspectival narration includes various perspectives in one text. Namely, a text is created through multiple narrators, who each bring in their own perspective. James Joyce's Ulysses (1920) is an example.
Modernist texts had an increased awareness of the unreliability of perspective, so they did not include fixed viewpoints but used techniques like paradox and ambiguity to add depth to the story.
Interiority and Individualism
Believing that traditional forms of storytelling were no longer fit to describe the world they were in, many experimental forms of writing increasingly turned inward into the characters. The following literary techniques allowed the writers to enter the interiority of the characters and emphasis the individual:
Stream of consciousness: a narrative device that attempts to express the character's thoughts as they come. A type of interior monologue, the text is more associative that often has sudden leaps in thought, long sentences and limited punctuation.
Interior monologue: is a narrative technique where the narrator enters the characters' minds to present their thoughts and feelings.
Free indirect speech: a narrative technique where a third-person narration uses some elements of first-person narration by presenting characters' inner workings.
By turning inward into the individual characters, modernist texts attempted to explore the diverse and ambiguous sense of self. Yet by doing this, the external reality and the perceiving mind become blurred.
Critics of Modernism thought that Modernist texts focused too much on characters' interior world without inviting social change.
Do you agree with this criticism?
Non-Linear Timelines
In 1905 and 1915, Albert Einstein published his theory of relativity, which proposed that time and space were relative to one's perspective. This means that time is not neutral or objective but changes depending on who perceives it.
So the next time you come late to a class, why not whip out Einstein's theory that time is only relative?
This theory exploded the linear perspective that ordered the world: that time can be easily categorised into past, present and future.
Drawing on this, modernist writers often rejected linear timelines. Modernist texts often dissolve the different time periods of past, present and future. Time becomes discontinuous, creating a text in "flux". Just as human thought processes are non-linear, so too became the plots and timelines.
Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five (1969) has a non-linear structure that frequently uses flashbacks.
Modernism Movement: Themes
Individualism & Alienation
Modernist writers focused on individuals instead of society. They followed the lives of these characters, coming to terms with a changing world and overcoming their trials and tribulations. Often these individuals felt alienated from their world. Caught up in the rapid pace of modernity, the characters are unable to find their bearings in the constantly changing environment through no fault of their own.
Nihilism
Modernism was inspired by the philosophy of nihilism in the sense that it rejected moral and religious principles that were perceived as the only way to achieve social progress. Modernists often believed that for people to be their authentic selves, individuals needed to be free from the overwhelming and restrictive control of conventions.
Nihilism is the philosophy that holds that all beliefs and values are intrinsically senseless. As such, life has no intrinsic meaning.
Absurdity
War made a significant impact on the public and also on writers. As poets and writers died or were greatly wounded during World War I, globalisation and capitalism re-created society. This contradiction in people's lives created a sense of absurdity. Franz Kafka's novella The Metamorphosis (1915) presents the absurdity of modern life when the protagonist, a travelling salesman, wakes up one day as a giant cockroach.
Absurdism is a branch of Modernism that finds the modern world meaningless, and thus all attempts to find meaning are inherently absurd. Unlike Nihilism, Absurdism found positivity in this meaninglessness, arguing that if all is meaningless anyway, you might as well have fun.
Modernism's Writers
James Joyce
James Joyce is regarded as one of the great masters of modernist writing, with his incredibly complex texts often requiring intense studying to grasp them fully. Joyce pioneered the radical use of narration, turning such texts as Ulysses (1922) into the modernist canon. The experimental novel Ulysses (1922) mirrors Homer's Odyssey (725–675 BCE), yet in the former, all the events take place in one day. Joyce uses symbolism, stream of consciousness and various types of narration to explore the complexity of the inner consciousness.
James Joyce's work: Dubliners (1914), A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916)
Franz Kafka
Franz Kafka's work is so unique that it has even received its own adjective, 'kafkaesque'. Yet it clearly draws on many hallmarks of Modernism. Kafka's experimental use of narrative perspective blurs the subject and object. Moreover, his non-linear use of time is framed through the characters' subjectivity. For example, the passing of time in the novella The Metamorphosis (1915) is inextricably linked to the protagonist Gregor Samsa. The length that Gregor passes out at the end of each part is directly linked to the length of time passing in the novella.
Franz Kafka's works: The Metamorphosis (1915), The Trial (1925), The Castle (1926)
Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf is often hailed as one of the great modernist writers. Her texts pioneered the literary device of stream of consciousness. Through interior monologue, she created developed and inward-looking characters that exhibited complex emotions.
Virginia Woolf's work: Mrs Dalloway (1925), To The Lighthouse (1927)
Ezra Pound
As well as being well known in Modernism in which he used allusion and free verse extensively, Ezra Pound was also one of the first to use imagism in Modernist poetry.
Ezra Pound's works: 'In a Station of the Metro' (1913), 'The Return' (1917).
Modernism vs Postmodernism
While some critics argue that we still are in the movement of modernism, others suggest that a new literary movement of postmodernism has evolved since the 1950s. Postmodernism is characterised by fragmentation and intertextuality in a hyperconnected world.
Modernist literature rejected previous forms of poetry and prose as it felt that they were no longer sufficient to represent modern life. In contrast, postmodernism consciously used previous forms and styles to comment on intertextuality.
Intertextuality is the relationship between texts. This can be achieved by writers directly referencing texts within their own work, creating a dialogue between writers and works.
Modernism - Key takeaways
Modernism desires to break from all previous movements, holding that they are inadequate to reflect the turmoil of modern life.
Modernist texts experiment with form to emphasise subjectivity, multi-perspective narration, interiority and non-linear timelines.
Key themes of Modernism are individualism and alienation and the philosophies of nihilism and absurdism.
Famous modernist writers include James Joyce, Franz Kafka, Virginia Woolf and Ezra Pound.
1 Lumen Learning, 'The Rise of Modernism,' 2016
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Frequently Asked Questions about Modernism
What is the main idea of Modernism?
The main idea of Modernism is to break from previous literary movements and create new experimental forms that emphasise subjectivity, individualism and the inner world of the characters.
What is an example of Modernism?
The experimental novel Ulysses (1922) by James Joyce is an example of a Modernist text as Joyce uses symbolism, stream of consciousness and various types of narration to explore the complexity of the inner consciousness.
What are characteristics of Modernism?
Characteristics of Modernism are experimentation, subjectivity, multi-perspectives, interiority, and non-linear timelines.
What are the three elements of Modernism?
Three elements of Modernism are breaking from traditional forms of writing, profound shifts in human perception and increasing internationalisation of narration.
What are the 5 aspects of modernism?
5 aspects of Modernism are experimentation, subjectivity, multi-perspectives, interiority, and non-linear timelines.
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Modernism is a global literary and artistic movement born out of major societal upheaval.