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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.

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


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Description:

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, none of their ideas involved baking chocolate chip cookies. Come on, dudes.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

There's More Than One Way to Crack a Modernist Egg, a la Shmoop.

00:09

The Modernists weren't optimistic people. The works they produced tended to be dark

00:16

and depressing.

00:16

However, just because the Modernists weren't full of sunshine and rainbows, doesn't mean

00:19

they lacked for suggestions on how to make things better.

00:23

Take American author Jack London.

00:26

This adventurous gentleman, who had been an oyster pirate and a tramp, among other things,

00:31

all before the age of twentyÉ

00:33

Éthought modern conveniences had turned mankind into a bunch of wimps. Sissies. Pantywaists.

00:41

London's solution to the global wuss problem was to have everyone drop everything and head

00:46

into the wilderness. He figured people had forgotten how to survive without the aid of

00:48

air conditioning and toilet paper...

00:48

...not that he did a great job with the whole outdoorsy thing himself, seeing as how he

00:52

contracted scurvy during the Klondike Gold Rush.

00:57

The poet Ezra Pound didn't think life should revolve around surviving grizzly bear attacks.

01:02

While Pound would have agreed with London that the beauty of human life was connected

01:04

to some basic animal desireÉ

01:05

Éthis future fascist believed that mankind could only return to its apex by studying

01:10

the classic art of the ancient world...

01:12

...although Pound may not have been as interested in classic art as he let on.

01:13

After all, his favorite stories were about Dionysus<<die-oh-nigh-sis>>, who just so happens

01:17

to be the ancient Greek god of wine, sex, and a really good time.

01:23

Pound's good buddy T.S. Eliot bought into the whole Òclassic-art-can-make-us-betterÓ

01:27

thing.

01:27

However, unlike Pound, Eliot was pretty sure wine and sex weren't an integral part of humanity's

01:33

revitalization. He preferred a more spiritual approach to life.

01:38

In Eliot's opinion, most people were just too ignorant to realize how beautiful the

01:42

world was long ago...

01:43

...and the only way to get back to that beautiful world, Eliot thoughtÉ was to read about it.

01:50

Then there's the British novelist Aldous Huxley, whose masterpiece Brave New World describes

01:55

a terrible future for humanity. Is there a terminator apocalypse, complete with the Governator?

02:03

Nope.

02:06

Has nuclear armaggedon turned the world into a radioactive wasteland? Nuh-uh.

02:10

Is mankind plagued by Graboids? No.

02:11

The reason why Huxley's world is so awful is because people get absolutely everything

02:13

they want out of life. Anticlimactic, no? For Huxley, the problem with the modern world

02:14

wasn't that people were suffering and unhappy. It's that they weren't experiencing enough

02:19

suffering and unhappiness.

02:24

In his opinion, the human spirit couldn't thrive without a dunk in the Well of Despair

02:27

every now and again.

02:28

With mankind living it up with the help of dishwashers and antidepressants, the human

02:29

soul was doomed to wither like a dying flower. Doomed, we say. Doooooomed.

02:29

And that's what four of the titans of Modernism thought about the seeming crisis of the early

02:33

twentieth century.

02:36

While they may not have agreed on what exactly was wrong with the world, all four believed

02:40

that something was amiss and in need of fixing...

02:42

...although the wide variety of solutions they offered gives a whole new meaning to

02:47

the phrase, ÒThere's more than one way to crack an egg.Ó

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