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Modernism and Masculinity: Mann, Wedekind, Kandinsky through World War I

Autor Gerald Izenberg
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 oct 2000
Modernism and Masculinity argues that a crisis of masculinity among European writers and artists played a key role in the modernist revolution. Gerald Izenberg revises the notion that the feminine provided a premodern refuge for artists critical of individualism and materialism. Industrialization and the growing power of the market inspired novelist Thomas Mann, playwright Frank Wedelind, and painter Wassily Kandinsky to feel the problematic character of their own masculinity. As a result, these artists each came to identify creativity, transcendence, and freedom with the feminine.

But their critique of masculinity created enormous challenges: How could they appropriate a feminine aesthetic while retaining their own masculine idenitites? How did appropiating the feminine affect their personal relationships or their political views? Modernism and Masculinity seeks to answer these questions. In this absorbing combination of biography and formal critique, Izenberg reconsiders the works of Mann, Wedekind, Kandinsky and semonstrates how the cirses of masculinity they endure are found not just within the images and forms of their art, but in the distinct and very personal impulses that inspired it.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226388687
ISBN-10: 0226388689
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 258p., 8 color plates, 5 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.53 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press

Notă biografică

Geral N. Izenberg is a professor of history at Washington University. He is the author of The Existentialist Critique of Freud: The Crisis of Autonomy and Impossible Individuality: Romanticism, Revolution, and the Origins of Modern Selfhood, 1787-1802.

Cuprins

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction Modernism, Masculinity, Method
1. Frank Wedekind and the Femininity of Freedom
2. Thomas Mann and the Feminine Passion for Transcendence
3. Wassily Kandinsky and the Origins of Abstraction
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index