1914-1939. The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.” ...

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1914-1939

Transcript of 1914-1939. The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.” ...

Page 1: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

1914-1939

Page 2: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”

America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

The lives of these Americans were radically different from those of their parents.

Page 3: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Nontraditional sentence structure and forms.

Challenged tradition. Moved beyond Realism. An overarching theme of Modernism

was “emancipation.”

Page 4: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Influenced by Walt Whitman’s free verse

Emily Dickinson’s compression

British and American Romantic poets

Page 5: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

T. S. Eliot William Carlos

Williams E. E. Cummings Robert Frost Ernest Hemingway F. Scott Fitzgerald William Faulkner John Steinbeck

Page 6: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Juxtaposition Intertextuality Open form Free verse Classical allusions Borrowing from cultures and

other languages

Page 7: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Two images that are otherwise not commonly brought together appear side by side or structurally close together, thereby forcing the reader to stop and reconsider the meaning of the text through the contrasting images, ideas, motifs, etc.

For example, “He was slouched alertly” is a juxtaposition.

Page 8: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Intertextuality is a relationship between two or more texts that quote from one another, allude to one another, or otherwise connect.

Page 9: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Breakdown of social and cultural norms

Alienation of the individual Individual as hero despite

uncontrollable future Product ofurbanscapes (cities)

Page 10: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Women were given the right to vote in 1920.

Hemlines were raised. Margaret Sanger

introduced the idea of birth control.

Karl Marx’s ideas flourish; the Bolshevik Revolution overthrows Russia’s czarist government and establishes the Soviet Union.

Page 11: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Sense of alienation in literature:The character

belongs to a “lost generation.”

The character suffers from a separation of thought from feeling.

The character has “a Dream deferred.”

Page 12: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Characters are heroic in the face of a future they can’t control.

Demonstrates the uncertainty felt by individuals living in this era.

Examples include Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby

Page 13: 1914-1939.  The period between the two World Wars was called a “traumatic coming of age.”  America had moved from an farming nation to an urban nation.

Life in the city differs from life on the farm.

Writers began to explore city life.

Conflicts begin to center on society.