Modernism
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Ezra Pound’s maxim, ‘Make it new’ (‘Canto LIII’) is often quoted as a succinct summary of modernism. What’s most inspirational about modernism, in my view, is its determination to question the basic assumptions of our lives, and art’s relation to them. Everything is up for grabs—from how we think, to what kind of world we should live in, from the impact of new technologies, to what kind of role the artist should play in contemporary life. Reading such literature is invigorating and challenging and, sometimes, difficult. But how could such profound questioning be easy?
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Collections in this Theme
| # | Title | Description | Contributor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Virginia Woolf | ||
| 2 | Katherine Mansfield | ||
| 3 | Joseph Conrad | ||
| 4 | James Joyce | ||
| 5 | Ezra Pound | ||
| 6 | D.H. Lawrence | ||
| 7 | Diaries as Literature - The Case of Virginia Woolf | In this Open Day taster lecture, Michael Whitworth considers whether diaries are literature and how… | Michael Whitworth |
| 8 | Virginia Woolf on Sickert's Ennui | This very short video with Professor Dame Hermione Lee explores Viginia Woolf's interpretation of… | Hermione Lee |
| 9 | Virginia Woolf's To The Lighthouse | Laura Salisbury and Sowon Park give a talk about Virginia Woolf's To The Lighthouse. The chair is… | Sowon Park, Laura Salisbury, Ben Morgan |
| 10 | Modernist Prefaces | Dr Sarah Copland on how Modernist writers such as Henry James and Joseph Conrad used the form of… | Dennis Duncan, Sarah Copland |