World War I and the Cultures of Modernity - Douglas Mackaman - Libros - University Press of Mississippi - 9781934110690 - 30 de julio de 2007
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World War I and the Cultures of Modernity

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These collected essays chart the World War I and its cultural contours from new and challenging intellectual vantage points. Contributors contest the long-accepted argument about World War I as the crucible of modern life. Instead, they argue that the war was as much a moment of cultural opportunity as it was the origin for modern society.


Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references (pages 161-192) and index. Publisher Marketing: A revisionist study that rejects the time-honored argument that the Great War was the cataclysmic break with the epoch that preceded it Download Plain Text versionAlthough many novels and works of history have been published on the calamity that was the First World War, no work until this one has sought to unify current historical and literary interpretations of the 1914-1918 era and its implications for modern life. The essays collected here chart the war and its cultural and literary contours from a variety of new and challenging intellectual vantage points. Focusing in different essays on America, France, Britain, and Germany, the contributors to this book contest the long-accepted argument about World War I as the crucible of modern life. Instead, their interrogations of the trench experience, home-front conditions, forms of mass culture, and literary genres reveal that the war was as much a moment of cultural opportunity as it was the point of origin for modern society or its cultural forms. Showing how prudery and decency became patriotic imperatives after 1914, for example, they explore how the wartime experience allowed for a cultural "crackdown" on decadence and sexuality that had been a conservative cry long before the war but became a matter of state policy only with the start of hostilities. In similarly revisionist interpretations of politics, literature, morality, and post-war efforts to memorialize the wartime experience, the contributors collapse the long-held notion of the war as a cataclysmic break with the epoch that preceded it. What they show instead is that the mass culture of the pre-war era produced and defined the war, just as the warring states used the forces of mass culture to keep the fighting going, to sustain society behind the lines, and ultimately to construct meaning and historical memory out of a thing we still call the "Great War." Douglas Mackaman, the author of "Leisure Settings: Bourgeois Culture," "Medicine and the Spa in Modern France," is an associate professor of history and the director of French area studies at the University of Southern Mississippi. Michael Mays is an associate professor of English and the co-founder and co-director of the Institute for the Study of Modern Life at the University of Southern Mississippi. Review Citations:

Choice 02/01/2001 pg. 1145 (EAN 9781578062430, Hardcover)

Contributor Bio:  Gilbert, Sandra M Sandra M. Gilbert has published numerous volumes of criticism, including, most recently, Death's Door: Modern Dying and the Ways We Grieve, as well as eight collections of poetry and a memoir. She is coeditor (with Susan Gubar) of The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women and a recipient of the National Book Critics Circle's Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award. A Distinguished Professor of English emerita at the University of California, Davis, she lives in Berkeley, California.

Medios de comunicación Libros     Paperback Book   (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado)
Publicado 30 de julio de 2007
ISBN13 9781934110690
Editores University Press of Mississippi
Género Chronological Period > 1900-1919 - Chronological Period > 20th Century
Páginas 197
Dimensiones 152 × 228 × 12 mm   ·   333 g
Lengua Inglés  
Editor Mackaman, Douglas
Editor Mays, Michael

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