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Modernism: a Very Short Introduction by Christopher Butler

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Modernism: a Very Short Introduction

Christopher Butler

Oxford University Press · Print & ebook · August 22, 2010

Reading lane: Art

A Philosophy pick for readers exploring Modernism: a Very Short Introduction.

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Modernist Primer

A compact guide to Modernism that keeps the reading brisk and mentally alert.

Come here for

  • A concise Philosophy pick on Modernism
  • Quick, idea-rich orientation

Expect

  • Short-form overview
  • Philosophy-leaning framing

Book Details

Authors
Christopher Butler
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Published
August 22, 2010
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Art
Reading lane
Art

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Art

About This Book

Is a tower block, your unmade bed, your lavatory basin, or the bicycle chained to the gate next door a work of art? Why should a novel have a beginning, a middle, and an end; or even a story? Whether we recognise it or not, virtually every aspect of our life today has been influenced in part by the aesthetic legacy of Modernism. In this Very Short Introduction Christopher Butler examines how and why Modernism began, explaining what it is and showing how it has gradually info...

Read full description

Is a tower block, your unmade bed, your lavatory basin, or the bicycle chained to the gate next door a work of art? Why should a novel have a beginning, a middle, and an end; or even a story? Whether we recognise it or not, virtually every aspect of our life today has been influenced in part by the aesthetic legacy of Modernism. In this Very Short Introduction Christopher Butler examines how and why Modernism began, explaining what it is and showing how it has gradually informed all aspects of 20th and 21st century life. Butler considers several aspects of modernism including some modernist works; movements and notions of the avant garde; and the idea of 'progress' in art. Butler looks at modernist ideas of the self, subjectivity, irrationalism, people and machines, and political definitions of modernism as a whole.

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