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The Dawn of the 20th CenturySlide 2Slide 3Slide 4Slide 5Slide 6Slide 7Slide 8Slide 9Slide 10Slide 11Slide 12Slide 13Slide 14Slide 15The Dawn of the 20th CenturyThe extent of the British Empire, from The Graphic 24 July 1886The Dawn of the 20th CenturyBritish Colonial Possessions in Africa and Asia (in orange) after World War I(Longman Anthology, p. 2119)The Dawn of the 20th Century“Beyond the Pale”:Modern British literature has consistently been distinguished by its movement "beyond the pale." The Pale was originally the fenced-in territory established around Dublin by the invading English in the medieval period, a border between English civilization and Celtic foreignness. In later usage, the phrase "beyond the pale" came to have a purely metaphoric meaning: to stand outside the conventional boundaries of law, behavior, or social class. (Longman Anthology, p. 2111)The Dawn of the 20th Century The Reaction against Victorian Values, Attitudes and SensibilitiesBritish writers and intellectuals of the early twentieth century were disillusioned and disenchanted with the confident, even arrogant assumptions of cultural superiority and moral righteousness of the late nineteenth century, the society known as “Victorian England” inHonor of Queen Victoria, who reigned from 1845-1900.(Longman Anthology, p. 2111)The Dawn of the 20th CenturyThe Foundations of Modern Skepticism—twentieth century writers and intellectuals do not share the Victorian confidence in a universal moral order or in divine justice:In Conrad's Heart of Darkness, the narrator Charlie Marlow suffers from a similar moral vertigo. When, at the novella's close, he resolves to perform an action he finds deeply repugnant-to tell a lie-he worries that his willful violation of the moral order will provoke an immediate act of divine retribution. None, however, is forthcoming: "It seemed to me that the house would collapse before I could escape, that the heavens would fall upon my head. But nothing happened. The heavens do not fall for such a trifle." In works like these, a voyage is undertaken into a vast, unknown, dark expanse. Those few who come out alive have seen too much ever to be the same.(Longman Anthology, p. 2114)The Dawn of the 20th CenturyThe death of God—Nietzsche:In The Joyful Science (1882) Friedrich Nietzche proclaimed “God is dead”: The point is not exactly whether or not there is a God; rather, in modern society almost no one has the same kind of relationship to God that the typical believer had in the middle ages.•Modern societies depend upon science as a solution to problems• Modern societies emphasize the personal development of individual humans rather than duty to one’s “superiors” (seen as the divinely-ordained authorities of a social hierarchy)(Longman Anthology, p. 2114)The Dawn of the 20th CenturyThe death of God—Nietzsche: In asserting that “God is dead” Nietzsche was suggesting that traditional religion had been discredited by advances in the natural and physical sciences, and as transcendent standards of truth disappeared, so logically must all moral and ethical systems depending on some faith for their force. It was from this base that Nietzsche created the idea of the Übermensch, the "superman" who because of his intellectual and moral superiority to others must not be bound by social conventions. Conrad's tragic figure Kurtz and [George Bernard] Shaw's comic Professor Henry Higgins represent two very different takes on this idea, building on Nietzsche's interest in showing how all values are "constructed" rather than given-at some level arbitrary, all truths being merely opinions, all social identities merely roles. (Kevin Dettmar and Julia Wicke, Longman Anthology, p. 2114)The Dawn of the 20th CenturyThe social construction of reality: Freud’s The Interpretation of Dreams (1900) and Psychopathology of Everyday Life (1901) together illustrate in an especially vivid way his evolving theories about the influence of the unconscious mind, and past (especially childhood) experience, on our daily lives.(Kevin Dettmar and Julia Wicke, Longman Anthology, p. 2114-15)The Dawn of the 20th CenturyEinstein problematizes Newtonian physics: A further intellectual shock wave was the revolution in physics that was spearheaded by Albert Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity (1905). In both this theory (dealing with motion) and later in the general theory of relativity (dealing with gravity), Einstein shook the traditional understanding of the universe and our relationship to it; the certainty and predictability of the Newtonian description of the universe had been undone. (Kevin Dettmar and Julia Wicke, Longman Anthology, p. 2115)The Dawn of the 20th CenturyHeisenberg’s “Uncertainty Principle”: The "uncertainty" of Einstein's universe was seemingly reinforced by developments in quantum physics, such as the work of Niels Bohr (who won the Nobel Prize in physics in 1922) and Werner Heisenberg, author of the famous "Uncertainty Principle" and the principle of complementarity, which together assert that the movement of subatomic particles can only be predicted by probability and not measured, as the very act of measurement alters their behavior. Ironically enough, the true import of these ideas is not, as the truism has it, that "everything is relative"-in fact, Einstein says almost the exact opposite. In Einstein's vision of the world, nothing is relative: everything is absolute, and absolutely fixed-except for us, fallible and limited observers, who have no secure standpoint from which "to see the thing as in itself it really is," to quote Matthew Arnold's 1867 formulation of the critic's goal. (Kevin Dettmar and Julia Wicke Longman Anthology, 2115)The Dawn of the 20th CenturyMoral Ambiguity:The modern writer was faced with an enormous, Nietzschean task: to create new and appropriate values for modern culture, and a style appropriate to those values. As a consequence, there is often a probing, nervous quality in the modernist explorations of ultimate questions. This quality can be seen at the very start of the century in Conrad's Heart of Darkness, a novel about psychological depth and social disintegration that simultaneously implicates its readers in the moral ambiguities of its events. These ambiguities, moreover, are reflected in the very presentation of the narrative itself. In the modern novel, we are no longer allowed to watch from a safe distance


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ISU ENG 110 - The Dawn of the 20th Century

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