Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
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from many sources; great discoveries in the physical sciences, changing our images of the universe
and our place in it, the industrialization of production, which transforms scientific knowledge into technology, creates new human environments and destroys the old ones, rapid and often cataclysmic urban growth”. (1988: 16) Thus, although some linguists still argue if Modernism truly represented a new cultural entity or was in fact better understood as an extension and exaggeration of basic modernist precepts, remained a matter for further analysis and debate. It seemed obviously that anyone seeking to understand the essence of Modernism must pay more attention to its broader social, cultural, economical, and political context. In Allen’s mind, although human nature preserves the same basic features, human understanding of that nature is constantly changing, thus, the natural interest into human psychology in modernist art was justifiable and understandable. Similarly, according to Peter Faulkner et al., “a general tendency in modern literature is to focus on the contents of a character’s mind, the inner, mental life of the experiencing subject”.(1977:31) Indeed, art in Modernism became independent from the real world; it rejected the mimetic and didactic functions and established the priority of the form over the content. Verdonk and Weber (1995), who state that the 16 main purpose of modernist literature was to reveal characters’ individual inner world, their psychological characteristics, as well as their constant fluctuation of mind, share Allen’s views. Indeed, as they say, it was important to describe life at the moment it is being lived paying attention to the smallest details that a human being perceives: smell and sound, colour and shape, movement and stillness. Although modernist characters try to escape from reality and neglect the past, at the same time they aim even stronger to stick in the present moment, to perceive some moments of the personal experience in their memories. Verdonk and Weber (1995:89) develop their insights in the changing role of history and time in modernist literature by stating that there is enough evidence to claim that during the period of Modernism, the notion of time underwent notorious changes. The linguists agree with Tim Armstrong’s claim that “the dynamization of temporality is one of the defining features of Modernism: past, present, and future exist in a relationship of crisis. Being and time are split”. (2005:9) Indeed, Armstrong foregrounds the fact that in Modernism, people recognized that the flow of time was fragmented and thus, the present was discontinuous with the past. It became obvious that through a process of social and cultural change life in the present was fundamentally different from life in the past: human existence was seen as a constant chain of periods of improvement and decline. Modernists view history and the current of time as a destructive and hopeless process. In their opinion, human existence is a tragedy, a continuous moral, cultural, and psychological degradation. Therefore, Allen argues (1954: 255) that Modernism rejects the conception of real time representation in literature and introduces a radically new psychologically based notion of broken or fragmentary time, which later penetrates into the world of art and brings its influence to bear on the concept of broken narrative in Modern fiction. Indeed, the powers of human beings to create, improve, and reshape their environment, with the aid of practical experimentation; scientific knowledge or technology denied the linear Enlightenment thinking in literary discourse. In her study, the psychologist Judith Greene (1973: 39) suggests that the period of Modernism was full of oppositions: the assessment of the past as different to the modern age, the recognition that the world was becoming more versatile and chaotic, and that the authorities of reason, science, and government were subject to deep critical analysis. Modernists wanted to reformulate the existing world by revealing and contemplating on everything that was painful or meaningless in order to lessen the misery and to make human mind and soul free from the sense of being guilty, disappointed, and exhausted from the experience of reality. Thus, as Greene characterizes it (ibid.), the period of Modernism was marked by the rejection of the false subjective rational harmony, and by the impetus to create everything new: new aims, values, relationships, traditions, new life, and new future. |
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