Literature after World War II  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 20:04, 9 August 2008
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

← Previous diff
Revision as of 08:17, 14 August 2009
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

Next diff →
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-*[[post-WWII]], [[French literature]], [[literature after World War II]]+The [[Aftermath of World War II]] saw a separation of "[[Modernist literature|Modernism]]" from "[[Postmodern literature|Postmodernism]]" ([[1950s literature]]), it is the ''floruit'' of the [[beat generation]] and the [[classical science fiction]] of [[Isaac Asimov]], [[Arthur C. Clarke]] and [[Robert A. Heinlein]].
-*[[French literature after World War II]]+
-The 1950s and 1960s were highly turbulent times in France: despite a dynamic economy ("les trente glorieuses" or "30 Glorious Years"), the country was torn by their colonial heritage ([[Vietnam]] and [[Indochina]], [[Algeria]]), by their collective sense of guilt from the [[Vichy Regime]], by their desire for renewed national prestige ([[Gaullism]]), and by conservative social tendencies in education and industry.+
-Inspired by the theatrical experiments in the early half of the century and by the horrors of the war, the so-called avant-garde Parisian theater, "New Theater" or "[[Theatre of the Absurd]]" around the writers [[Eugène Ionesco]], [[Samuel Beckett]], [[Jean Genet]], [[Arthur Adamov]], [[Fernando Arrabal]] refused simple explanations and abandoned traditional characters, plots and staging. Other experiments in theatre involved decentralisation, regional theater, "popular theater" (designed to bring working classes to the theater), and theater heavily influenced by [[Bertold Brecht]] (largely unknown in France before 1954), and the productions of [[Arthur Adamov]] and [[Roger Planchon]]. [http://www.festival-avignon.com The Avignon festival] was started in 1947 by [[Jean Vilar]] who was also important in the creation of the T.N.P. or "[[Théâtre national populaire]]".+==World War II==
 +:''[[1940s literature]]''
 +*[[Orson Welles]]
 +*[[George Orwell]]
 +*[[J. R. R. Tolkien]] writes ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' (published 1954/55)
-The French novel from the 1950s on went though a similar experimentation in the group of writers published by "[[Les Éditions de Minuit]]", a French publisher; this "[[Nouveau roman]]" ("new novel"), associated with [[Alain Robbe-Grillet]], [[Marguerite Duras]], [[Robert Pinget]], [[Michel Butor]], [[Samuel Beckett]], [[Nathalie Sarraute]], [[Claude Simon]], also abandoned traditional plot, voice, characters and psychology. To a certain degree, these developments closely paralleled changes in cinema in the same period (the [[Nouvelle Vague]]).+==Cold War period==
-The writers [[Georges Perec]], [[Raymond Queneau]], [[Jacques Roubaud]] are associated with the creative movement [[Oulipo]] (founded in 1960) which uses elaborate mathematical strategies and constraints (such as [[lipogram]]s and [[palindrome]]s) as a means of triggering ideas and inspiration.+* [[Umberto Eco]] ''Il nome della rosa'' ([[1980 in literature|1980]] - English translation: ''[[The Name of the Rose]]'', 1983), ''Il pendolo di Foucault'' ([[1988 in literature|1988]] - English translation: ''[[Foucault's Pendulum (book)|Foucault's Pendulum]]'', 1989)
-Poetry in the post-war period followed a number of interlinked paths, most notably deriving from surrealism (such as with the early work of [[René Char]]), or from philosophical and phenomenological concerns stemming from [[Heidegger]], [[Friedrich Hölderlin]], existentialism, the relationship between poetry and the visual arts, and [[Stéphane Mallarmé]]'s notions of the limits of language. Another important influence was the German poet [[Paul Celan]]. Poets concerned with these philosophical/language concerns -- especially concentrated around the review "[[L'Ephémère]]" -- include [[Yves Bonnefoy]], [[André du Bouchet]], [[Jacques Dupin]], [[Roger Giroux]] and [[Philippe Jaccottet]]. Many of these ideas were also key to the works of [[Maurice Blanchot]]. The unique poetry of [[Francis Ponge]] exerted a strong influence on a variety of writers (both phenomenologists and those from the group "[[Tel Quel]]"). The later poets [[Claude Royet-Journoud]], [[Anne-Marie Albiach]], [[Emmanuel Hocquard]], and to a degree [[Jean Daive]], describe a shift from [[Heidegger]] to [[Ludwig Wittgenstein]] and a reevalution of Mallarmé's notion of fiction and theatricality; these poets were also influenced by certain English-language modern poets (such as [[Ezra Pound]], [[Louis Zukofsky]], [[William Carlos Williams]], and [[George Oppen]]) along with certain American postmodern and ''avant garde'' poets loosely grouped around the [[language poetry]] movement (such as [[Michael Palmer]], [[Keith Waldrop]] and [[Susan Howe]]; with her husband Keith Waldrop, [[Rosmarie Waldrop]] has a profound association with these poets, due in no small measure to her translations of [[Edmond Jabès]] and the prose of [[Paul Celan]] into English).+==1990s==
- +*''[[The English Patient]]'' by [[Michael Ondaatje]]
-The events of May 1968 marked a watershed in the development of a radical ideology of revolutionary change in education, class, family and literature. In theater, the conception of "création collective" developed by [[Ariane Mnouchkine]]'s Théâtre du Soleil refused division into writers, actors and producers: the goal was for total collaboration, for multiple points of view, for an elimination of separation between actors and the public, and for the audience to seek out their own truth. +*''[[Harry Potter]]'' series
- +*[[Boris Akunin]]
-The most important review of the post-1968 period -- "[[Tel Quel]]" -- is associated with the writers [[Philippe Sollers]], [[Julia Kristeva]], [[Georges Bataille]], the poets [[Marcelin Pleynet]] and [[Denis Roche]], the critics [[Roland Barthes]], [[Gérard Genette]] and the philosophers [[Jacques Derrida]], [[Jacques Lacan]].+*[[slam poetry]]
- +==See also==
-Another post-1968 change was the birth of "[[Ecriture Féminine]]" promoted by the feminist Editions des Femmes, with new women writers as [[Chantal Chawaf]], [[Hélène Cixous]], [[Luce Irigaray]]...+*[[Aftermath of World War II]]
 +*[[20th century literature]]
 +*[[French literature after World War II]]
 +*[[Postmodern literature]]
 +*[[1940s literature]]
 +*[[1950s literature]]
 +*[[1960s literature]]
 +*[[1970s literature]]
 +*[[1980s literature]]
 +*[[1990s literature]]
 +*[[2000s literature]]
-From the 1960s on, many of the most daring experiments in French literature have come from writers born in French overseas departments or former colonies. This [[Francophone literature]] includes the prize winning novels of [[Tahar ben Jelloun]] ([[Morroco]]), [[Patrick Chamoiseau]] ([[Martinique]]), [[Amin Maalouf]] ([[Lebanon]]) and [[Assia Djebar]] ([[Algeria]]). 
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Revision as of 08:17, 14 August 2009

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

The Aftermath of World War II saw a separation of "Modernism" from "Postmodernism" (1950s literature), it is the floruit of the beat generation and the classical science fiction of Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke and Robert A. Heinlein.

Contents

World War II

1940s literature

Cold War period

1990s

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Literature after World War II" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools