"Traditionalism v modernism" Essays and Research Papers

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    tendion whose resulting moral force created western civilization and its American offshoot. Reagan concluded that this was mordernly described as conservatism . also argued that “freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction” Traditionalism was mentioned in the quote but community and family were ignored and a talk about “values and principals” but nothing mentioned about working together

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    Ideology of Modernism

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    MODERNISM  Question:  To what extent did the ideology of Modernism reflect new sets of values in architecture and design in the period between 1919 and 1960?  Answer this question with examination of works of 3 architects/designers of the time analyzing how Modernism was manifested in their works. ANSWER Bauhaus’ Walter Gropius said in Germany‚ 1919‚ “Today’s artist lives in an era of dissolution without guidance.  He stands alone.  The old forms are in ruins‚ the benumbed world is shaken up‚

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    Michael Garuba Differentiate Modernism from Post Modernism Modernism‚ in literature‚ is the basic concept of new methods through new reasoning. During the renaissance period of English history‚ the traditional values of Western civilization‚ which the Victorians had only begun to question‚ came to be questioned seriously by a number of new writers who saw society breaking down around them. The world was being looked at from a new perspective‚ mostly scientifically. Traditional literary forms

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    An Essay on Modernism

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    Modernism describes the ideology of the art and design that were produced during the modernist period. There has been a lot of controversy about when modernism started‚ yet many believe it initiated sometime in the late 19th century and continued to the early 20th century. The modernist movement was meant to be a break from traditions and it was set up to separate the value of certain works from the conservative realism. For instance‚ Unlike the traditional art that was aesthetic‚ this movement was

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    Post Modernism

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    Post Modernism (1965-present): 1. responses to modernism‚ especially refusals of some of its totalizing premises and effects‚ and of its implicit or explicit distinction between ’high’ culture and commonly lived life 2. responses to such things as a world lived under nuclear threat and threat to the geosphere‚ to a world of faster communication‚ mass mediated reality‚ greater diversity of cultures and mores and a consequent pluralism 3. acknowledgments of and in some senses struggles

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    Notes on Modernism

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    with talking vultures in "Their Eyes were Watching God)  Minimalism Extreme restriction of a work’s contents to a bare minimum of necessary elements  Minimalism Authors include Samuel Beckett‚ Ernest Hemingway‚ and the imagists  Modernism A general term applied retrospectively to the wide range of experimental and avant-garde trends in the literature and other arts of the late 19th and early 20th centuries‚ mainly in Europe and North America. The movement’s literature is characterized

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    Modernism in Literature

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    Modernism in Literature Introduction The horrors of World War I (1914-19)‚ with its accompanying atrocities and senselessness became the catalyst for the Modernist movement in literature. Modernist authors felt betrayed by the war‚ believing that the institutions in which they were taught had led the civilized world into bloody conflict. They no longer turned to these institutions as a reliable means to decipher the meaning of life but instead sought for the answers within themselves. Thus‚ the

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    Themes of Modernism

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    Themes of Modernism The term Modernism refers to the shift in values and cultural awareness that appeared in the art and literature of the post- World War One period. Modernism showed that there had been a change since the previous Victorian period. The Victorian era and its literature showed a very optimistic outlook on life‚ but the new era of Modernism rejected this idea and chose to portray life to be extremely pessimistic. Many of the Modern writers showed the world and society to be in an

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    Manet and Modernism

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    Manet and Modernism: A Perspective on Manet Modernism‚ as it relates to the work of Edouard Manet‚ requires at least two caveats as prerequisites to forming a perspective. The problem is twofold: 1) ‘modernism’ is a term with broad‚ even sometimes vague‚ definitions‚ and 2) Edouard Manet’s prolific work is open to broad degrees of interpretation. In the first instance‚ and for the contextual purposes of this essay‚ ‘modernism’ can be described here as primarily including efforts in the field

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    Modernism in Art

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    with each other‚ they are traditionally clusted under the label of Modernism. It is thus rather difficult to give a precise definition of modernism‚ one that encompasses all the characteristics of the aritists and architects who are commonly grouped under this label. What modernists do have in common is that their work contains at least one of two characteristics of modernism. One fundamental characteristic of modernism is a demonstration of progressive innovation. In general‚ a modernist

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