Modernism
Modernism is a broadly defined cultural movement (or series of movements) that took hold in the late 19th century and reached its most radical peak on the eve of The Great War. It grew out of the philosophical, scientific, political, and ideological shifts that followed the Industrial Revolution, up to The Great War and its aftermath. For artists and writers, the Modernist project was a re-evaluation of the assumptions and aesthetic values of their predecessors. It evolved from the Romantic rejection of Enlightenment positivism and faith in reason. Modernist writers broke with Romantic pieties and clichés (such as the notion of the Sublime) and became self-consciously skeptical of language and its claims on coherence. It gave way to futurism. In the early 20th century, novelists such as Henry James, Virginia Woolf, and Joseph Conrad experimented with shifts in time and narrative points of view. While living in Paris before the war, Gertrude Stein explored the possibilities of creating literary works that broke with conventional syntactical and referential practices. Ezra Pound vowed to “make it new” and “break the pentameter,” (Although he was really talking about futurism, not modernism) while T.S. Eliot wrote The Waste Land in the shadow of The Great War. Shortly after The Waste Land was published in 1922, it became the archetypical Modernist text, rife with allusions, linguistic fragments, and mixed registers and languages. Modernism also generated many other movements, such as Futurism, Objectivism, Postmodernism, and Surrealism.