ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Modernism Videos 2 videos

There's More Than One Way to Crack a Modernist Egg
539 Views

The Modernists thought the world had a lot of problems, and they were intent on fixing them—or at least talking about fixing them. Unfortunately,...

Crisis
507 Views

Modernism was meant to solve the world's problems, but some authors—Virginia Woolf and Ezra Pound, for example—had a few crises of their own.

See All

Crisis 507 Views


Share It!


Description:

Modernism was meant to solve the world's problems, but some authors—Virginia Woolf and Ezra Pound, for example—had a few crises of their own.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Crisis, a la Shmoop. The twentieth century didn't start out so

00:08

great. Russia wentÉ redÉ and bid a fond farewell to the tsar and his family.

00:17

After the heir to the Austro-Hungarian empire got shot, Europe lost its collective mind

00:24

and millions of people ended up dead.

00:27

Twenty-five percent of the global population caught a really nasty case of the flu.

00:30

Heck, the Titanic was slayed by an iceberg. With so many crazy things happening, people

00:37

felt like they were living amidst an ongoing crisis. Writers of the age responded to this

00:42

in differentÉ sometimes opposingÉ ways.

00:45

The American poet Ezra Pound, for example, didn't like the language in which poetry was

00:50

written at the time. Way too many adjectives.

00:56

He decided to start the Imagism movement, the goal of which was to create an extremely

01:01

specific...

01:03

...yep, you guessed it...

01:04

...image in the reader's mind. Pound sought clarity in poetry. He wanted

01:09

to strip away past conventions, romanticism and rhetoric, and abstraction.

01:13

Pound also may have come up with Imagism as a marketing gimmick to help his friend Hilda

01:18

Doolittle...

01:18

...no relation to Eliza or Doctor...

01:24

...get her work published in Europe. It must have worked, because here we are one hundred

01:29

years later, still talking about how very important Imagism was to twentieth century

01:34

poetry. Pound may have wanted poetry to be hard and

01:37

polished, but the author Virginia Woolf believed the writing of the time should be more diffusedÉ

01:46

sort of like a spider web of different human perspectives.

01:51

For Woolf, one of the worst symptoms of the crisis of Modernism was the loneliness of

01:56

modern life.

01:57

And we figure she knew all about loneliness, given that she killed herself in 1941 by going

02:03

for a very permanent swim in the local river. Of course, loneliness and that sense of crisis

02:11

that helped define Modernist writing weren't the only feelings Woolf thought people needed

02:15

to overcome.

02:21

The prudishness associated with the late nineteenth century was still alive and very well in Woolf's

02:28

day.

02:29

So, not only was the world going to hell in a handbasket, but folks were supposed to be

02:34

very proper and moral...

02:35

...and never, ever, ever, ever talk about sex.

02:43

With that combo in play, no wonder Woolf thought that her writing should help readers feel

02:46

more connected to one another; that her purpose should be to reach out and touch someone...

02:53

...through literature, Virginia. Through literature. Pound and Woolf were two very different writers,

03:01

with two very different viewpoints of the Modernist movement.

03:04

Some prefer Pound's method of annihilating innocent adjectives...

03:08

...others dig Woolf's more lyrical prose.

03:10

Too bad Woolf went for a swim without end and Pound decided to add Italian fascism to

03:15

his repertoire of crazy.

Related Videos

There's More Than One Way to Crack a Modernist Egg
539 Views

The Modernists thought the world had a lot of problems, and they were intent on fixing them—or at least talking about fixing them. Unfortunately,...

Catch-22
11167 Views

This video discusses the major ideas of the satirical American war novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. The horror of war meets…absurdity and humor?...

One Hundred Years of Solitude
8118 Views

One of the bestselling books of all time? Yes, please.

Federalism
2533 Views

This video explains Federalism and the quest for a fair balance between state and national power. It covers the progression and compromises of Fede...

Shakespeare on Love
17380 Views

We may all be fools when it comes to love, but thankfully none of us will accidentally switch places with our twin brother and fall in love with ou...