Results for 'Modernism (Aesthetics )'

718 found
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  1.  12
    Fascist Modernism: Aesthetics, Politics, and the Avant-Garde.Andrew Hewitt - 1993 - Stanford University Press.
    Using the literary work of Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, the founder of the Italian Futurist movement and an early associate of Mussolini, the author explores the point of contact between a "progressive" aesthetic practice and a "reactionary" political ideology.
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  2. The Metaphysics of Modernism: Aesthetic Myth and the Myth of the Aesthetic'.Michael Bell - 1999 - In David Fuller & Patricia Waugh (eds.), The Arts and Sciences of Criticism. Oxford University Press. pp. 238--256.
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  3. Marxism and modernist aesthetics: reading Kafka and Beckett.Geoff Wade - 1992 - In Stephen Regan (ed.), The Politics of Pleasure: Aesthetics and Cultural Theory. Open University Press. pp. 1992--109.
     
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  4.  27
    Paul Valery' S Modernist Aesthetic Object.Steven Cassedy - 1986 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 45 (1):77-86.
  5.  55
    Aestheticism: Deep Formalism and the Emergence of Modernist Aesthetics.Michalle Gal - 2015 - Bern: Peter Lang.
    This book offers, for the first time in aesthetics, a comprehensive account of aestheticism of the 19<SUP>th</SUP> century as a philosophical theory of its own right. Taking philosophical and art-historical viewpoints, this cross-disciplinary book presents aestheticism as the foundational movement of modernist aesthetics of the 20<SUP>th</SUP> century. Emerging in the writings of the foremost aestheticists - Oscar Wilde, Walter Pater, James Whistler, and their formalist successors such as Clive Bell, Roger Fry, and Clement Greenberg - aestheticism offers a (...)
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  6.  28
    Transcendence and the End of Modernist Aesthetics.Jack Dudley - 2013 - Renascence 65 (2):103-124.
    Taking into account Jones’s adoption of principles of modernist poetics—juxtaposition, allusion, and parataxis, all geared “to create newness”—this essay examines the theological ramifications for the poet’s breaking down, in his semi-autobiographical World War I poem, of modernist order and control. Jones unravels modernist aesthetics, conveying their inadequacy to the brutal realities of war. A space for religious belief appears through this process, but one not of heightened understanding; instead it is a via negativa, an unknowing, consonant with ideas from (...)
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  7.  49
    Art as Abstract Machine: Guattari's Modernist Aesthetics.Stephen Zepke - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (2):224-239.
    Felix Guattari was a modernist. He not only liked a lot of modernist artists, but his ‘aesthetic paradigm’ found its generative diagram in modern art. The most important aspect of this diagram was its insistence on the production of the new, the way it produced a utopian projection of a ‘people to come’, and so a politics whose only horizon was the future. Also important for Guattari's diagram of the ‘modern’ were the forces of abstraction, autonomy and immanent critique. Together (...)
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  8.  92
    The modernist cult of ugliness: aesthetic and gender politics.Lesley Higgins - 2002 - New York: Palgrave.
    "Cult of ugliness," Ezra Pound’s phrase, powerfully summarizes the ways in which modernists such as Pound, T. S. Eliot, Wyndham Lewis, and T. E. Hulme—the self-styled "Men of 1914"—responded to the "horrid or sordid or disgusting" conditions of modernity by radically changing aesthetic theory and literary practice. Only the representation of "ugliness," they protested, would produce the new, truly "beautiful" work of art. They dissociated the beautiful from its traditional embodiment in female beauty, and from its association with Walter Pater (...)
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  9.  19
    The Literate Eye: Victorian Art Writing and Modernist Aesthetics.Rachel Teukolsky - 2009 - Oup Usa.
    Rather than focusing on German philosophy or the French avant-gardes, as many books on the history of aesthetics do, Teukolsky takes up British responses to modern art controversies, thus providing a unique view on the development of artistic forms and art history. She considers the plentiful archive of Victorian "art writing"-essays addressed to the visual arts- to reveal the key role played by nineteenth-century writers in the rise of modernist Anglo-American aesthetics. Though Victorians are most often associated with (...)
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  10.  30
    Feminist Aesthetics and the Politics of Modernism.Ewa Plonowska Ziarek - 2012 - Columbia University Press.
    Ewa Ziarek fully articulates a feminist aesthetics, focusing on the struggle for freedom in women's literary and political modernism and the devastating impact of racist violence and sexism. She examines the contradiction between women's transformative literary and political practices and the oppressive realities of racist violence and sexism, and she situates these tensions within the entrenched opposition between revolt and melancholia in studies of modernity and within the friction between material injuries and experimental aesthetic forms. Ziarek's political and (...)
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  11.  13
    Boris Pasternak and Silver Age Intellectual Culture: From Modernist Aesthetics to the New Classical.Olga A. Zhukova - 2021 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 58 (4):252-267.
    Boris Pasternak is a key figure in the history of twentieth-century Russian culture. The artistic originality of his poetry and prose has been the subject of fruitful discussion within literary the...
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  12. The role of sublimity in the development of modernist aesthetics.Kari Elise Lokke - 1982 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 40 (4):421-429.
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  13.  5
    Mediterranean modernism: intercultural exchange and aesthetic development.Adam J. Goldwyn & Renée M. Silverman (eds.) - 2016 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    This book explores how Modernist movements all across the Mediterranean basin differed from those of other regions. The chapters show how the political and economic turmoil of a period marked by world war, revolution, decolonization, nationalism, and the rapid advance of new technologies compelled artists, writers, and other intellectuals to create a new hybrid Mediterranean Modernist aesthetic which sought to balance the tensions between local and foreign, tradition and innovation, and colonial and postcolonial.
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  14.  9
    Rethinking the Vanguard: aesthetic and political positions in the modernist debate, 1917-1962.John W. Maerhofer - 2009 - Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    How has political revolution figured into the development of avant-garde cultural production? Is the vanguard an antiquated concept or does its influence still resonate in the 21st century? Focusing closely on the convergence of aesthetics and politics that materialized in the early part of the twentieth century, this study offers a re-interpretation of the historical avant-garde from 1917 to 1962, a turbulent period in intellectual history which marked the apex, crisis, and decline of vanguardist authority. Moving from the impact (...)
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  15.  28
    Victorian modernism: pragmatism and the varieties of aesthetic experience.Jessica R. Feldman - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In Victorian Modernism: Pragmatism and the Varieties of Aesthetic Experience Jessica Feldman sheds a pragmatist light on the relation between the Victorian age and Modernism by dislodging truistic notions of Modernism as an art of crisis, rupture, elitism and loss. She examines aesthetic sites of Victorian Modernism - including workrooms, parlours, friendships, and family relations as well as printed texts and paintings - as they develop through interminglings and continuities as well as gaps and breaks. Examining (...)
  16.  9
    The aesthetics of matter: modernism, the avant-garde and material exchange.Sarah Posman, Anne Reverseau, David Ayers, Sascha Bru & Benedikt Hjartarson (eds.) - 2013 - Berlin: De Gruyter.
    This volume proposes an in-depth exploration of the materiality of art and writing in modernism and the avant-garde. The essays explore how the avant-gardes and modernism attempted to establish the material specificity and hybridityof media and art forms. The collection sheds light on the full range and import of the aesthetics of matter in avant-garde and modernist practice across all art forms from the 19th century to the present day.
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  17.  10
    GAL, MICHALLE. Aestheticism: Deep Formalism and the Emergence of Modernist Aesthetics. Bern, Switzerland: Peter Lang AG International Academic Publishers, 2015, 166 pp., 6 color illus., $60.95 paper. [REVIEW]Tobyn Demarco - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 74 (4):425-428.
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  18.  31
    Modernism and “Aesthetic Experience”: Art, Aesthetics – and the Role of Modernism.Kyndrup Morten - 2016 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 25 (51).
    The role and influence of Modernism is the focus of this article. Modernism’s lasting and unforeseeable influence is due to its key importance to the development of the general conditions of art within modernity. Along with Modernism, the implications of the modern system of art became visible for real. Modernism produced the necessity of rethinking the distinction between “art” and “the aesthetic,” based on their original foundations in the 18th century, respectively – a call for a (...)
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  19.  24
    The Literate Eye: Victorian Art Writing and Modernist Aesthetics: Book Reviews. [REVIEW]Rebecca Beasley - 2011 - British Journal of Aesthetics 51 (1):111-113.
    (No abstract is available for this citation).
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  20.  22
    Aestheticism: Deep Formalism and the Emergence of Modernist Aesthetics[REVIEW]Saul Fisher - 2017 - British Journal of Aesthetics 57 (4):437-440.
    Surely amongst the most exciting and vindicating features of philosophy and criticism of art are the interactions that they have with the actual practices of art. The histories of art and current discussions about art are dotted with special moments in which philosophers or critics—from Ruskin through to Danto and beyond—become influenced, or were influenced by, the art of their times. More curious—and less common still—is the influence of philosophy of art on art criticism, or the other way around. The (...)
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  21.  11
    Weaponised Aesthetics and Dystopian Modernism: Cut-ups, Playbacks, Pick-ups and the ‘Limits of Control’ from Burroughs to Deleuze.S. E. Gontarski - 2020 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (4):555-584.
    American outlier writer William S. Burroughs was a creative force – an homme de lettres in his own right, yes, but as a cultural theorist as well, particularly his anticipation of what we now regularly call ‘a society of control’ or ‘a surveillance culture’, and, moreover, as a textual embodiment as well. That is, Burroughs was as much a media theorist and performance artist as he was a traditional literary figure, what we generally call a writer, or novelist, although he (...)
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  22.  80
    Gadamer, aesthetic modernism, and the rehabilitation of allegory: The relevance of Paul Klee.Stephen Watson - 2004 - Research in Phenomenology 34 (1):45-72.
    Paul Klee's art found broad impact upon philosophers of varying commitments, including Hans-Georg Gadamer. Moreover, Klee himself was not only one of the most important artists of aesthetic modernism but one of its leading theoreticians, and much in his work, as in Gadamer's, originated in post-Kantian literary theory's explications of symbol and allegory. Indeed at one point in Truth and Method, Gadamer associates his project for a general "theory of hermeneutic experience" not only with Goethe's metaphysical account of the (...)
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  23.  9
    The pulse of modernism: physiological aesthetics in Fin-de-Siècle Europe.Robert Michael Brain - 2015 - Seattle: University of Washington Press.
    Robert Brain traces the origins of artistic modernism to specific technologies of perception developed in late-nineteenth-century laboratories. Brain argues that the thriving fin-de-siècle field of “physiological aesthetics,” which sought physiological explanations for the capacity to appreciate beauty and art, changed the way poets, artists, and musicians worked and brought a dramatic transformation to the idea of art itself.
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  24.  72
    Aesthetic licence: Foucault's modernism and Kant's post-modernism.Salim Kemal - 1999 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 7 (3):281 – 303.
    Recently criticism and theory have maintained that Kant's aesthetic theory is central to modernism, and have used Foucault's archaeology to interrogate that modernism. This paper suggests that archaeology ultimately cannot escape Kant's hold because it depends on Kantian theses. The first section will consider how a recent exponent of an 'archaeological' viewpoint characterizes Kant's theory and will set out the critical role Kant ascribes to art. The second section compares Kant and Foucault to argue that despite appearances their (...)
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  25.  22
    Modernist misapprehensions of Foucault's aesthetics.Jon Simons - 2000 - Cultural Values 4 (1):40-57.
    Several critics of Foucault, notably Alan Megill and Jürgen Habermas, accuse Foucault of being an ‘aestheticist’. As such, Foucault fails to realise that the very appeal to aesthetics is made possible by modernity's rationalization, which offers better resources for emancipation than dangerous aestheticizations. This paper argues that such criticisms mistakenly deploy only certain modernist notions of aesthetics against Foucault. There are some fair grounds for holding that Foucault does appeal to such conceptions of aesthetics in his theorization (...)
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  26.  12
    Invalid Modernism: Disability and the Missing Body of the Aesthetic.Michael Davidson - 2019 - Oxford University Press.
    This volume studies a range of modernist works by writers such as Virginia Woolf, Oscar Wilde, Henry James, and James Joyce to explore what Modernism looks like when viewed through the lens of disability.
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  27.  5
    Post-Modernism, as Decadence On Aesthetics and the Philosophy of History.G. W. Trompf - 1999 - Filozofski Vestnik 20 (S2).
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  28.  12
    Modernism and Hegemony: A Materialist Critique of Aesthetic Agencies.Neil Larsen & Jaime Concha - 1990 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Rich with historical and cultural value, these works are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.
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  29.  18
    The aesthetics of cyber-modernism.Gerold Necker - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1620-1621.
  30. Ethics and Aesthetics in European Modernist Literature: From the Sublime to the Uncanny.David Ellison - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    David Ellison's book is an investigation into the historical origins and textual practice of European literary Modernism. Ellison's study traces the origins of Modernism to the emergence of early German Romanticism from the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, and emphasizes how the passage from Romanticism to Modernism can be followed in the gradual transition from the sublime to the uncanny. Arguing that what we call High Modernism cannot be reduced to a religion of beauty, an experimentation with (...)
     
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  31.  8
    After Modernism: Outlines of an Aesthetics of Posthistory.Dietmar Kamper - 1990 - Theory, Culture and Society 7 (1):107-118.
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  32. 'Aesthetics, Modernism, Literature: Cavell's Transformations of Philosophy,”.J. M. Bernstein - 2003 - In Richard Eldridge (ed.), Stanley Cavell. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 107--42.
     
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  33. "Aesthetics after Modernism": Peter Fuller. [REVIEW]Andrew Harrison - 1985 - British Journal of Aesthetics 25 (4):401.
     
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  34.  14
    An Apprehensive Aesthetic: The Legacy of Modernist Culture.Andrew McNamara - 2009 - Peter Lang.
    In this book, the author seeks to clarify this apprehensive perception of art.
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  35.  16
    Spoiled Distinctions: Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism.Hannah Freed-Thall - 2015 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Spoiled Distinctions investigates crises of evaluation in twentieth-century France. Taking Marcel Proust as its central figure, the book theorizes the disorienting force of everyday aesthetic experience. In a series of surprising readings, Hannah Freed-Thall frees Proust from his reputation as the most refined of high modernists. The author of In Search of Lost Time appears here as a journalist and newspaper enthusiast, a literary ventriloquist and connoisseur of popular scandals, and a writer attentive to the unsophisticated phenomenology of the here (...)
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  36.  23
    Between the aesthetic renovation and the political renovation: Politics of modernism in Ruben Darío, Leopoldo Lugones y Manuel Ugarte.Natalia Bustelo - 2013 - Estudios de Filosofía Práctica E Historia de Las Ideas 15 (1):27-47.
    El artículo ilumina los modos rivales de articular el modernismo estético y socialismo propuestos hacia fines del siglo XIX por Rubén Darío, Leopoldo Lugones y Manuel Ugarte. Tomando como hilo conductor las disímiles acepciones del término “burgués” por las que parecen haber optado estos escritores, reconstruimos el deslindamiento que intenta Darío entre las dos tendencias modernizadoras, luego analizamos la conexión entre modernismo y socialismo revolucionario que realiza Lugones en el periódico La Montaña (1897), para finalmente explorar los cuestionamientos del joven (...)
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  37. The pulse of modernism: experimental physiology and aesthetic avant-gardes circa 1900.Robert Michael Brain - 2008 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 39 (3):393-417.
    When discussing the changing sense of reality around 1900 in the cultural arts the lexicon of early modernism reigns supreme. This essay contends that a critical condition for the possibility of many of the turn of the century modernist movements in the arts can be found in exchange of instruments, concepts, and media of representation between the sciences and the arts. One route of interaction came through physiological aesthetics, the attempt to ‘elucidate physiologically the nature of our Aesthetic (...)
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  38. Criticism of reason and aesthetics of modernism.M. Eckert - 1994 - Philosophisches Jahrbuch 101 (2):248-259.
     
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  39. Ranciere's Aesthetic Revolution and Its Modernist Residues.Jakub Stejskal - 2012 - Filozofski Vestnik 33 (3):39 - +.
  40.  16
    Parsing the promise of modernism: Habermas, the avant‐garde and the aesthetics of normative order.Benedict Coleridge - forthcoming - Constellations.
  41.  6
    Modernism, ethics and the political imagination: living wrong life rightly.Ben Ware - 2017 - London, United Kingdom: Palgrave MacMillan.
    In this groundbreaking new study, Ben Ware carries out a bold reassessment of the relationship between modernism and ethics, arguing that modernist literature and philosophy offer more than simply a snapshot of the moral conflicts of the past: they provide a crucial point of reference for today's emancipatory struggles. Modernism in this assessment is characterized not only by a concern with language and aesthetic creativity, but also by a preoccupation with the question of how to live. Investigating ethical (...)
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  42.  26
    Projections of Memory: Romanticism, Modernism, and the Aesthetics of Film.Richard I. Suchenski - 2016 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Projections of Memory is an exploration of a body of innovative cinematic works that utilize their extraordinary scope to construct monuments to the imagination that promise profound transformations of vision, selfhood, and experience. This form of cinema acts as a nexus through which currents from the other arts can interpenetrate. By examining the strategies of these projects in relation to one another and to the larger historical forces that shape them--tracing the shifts and permutations of their forms and aspirations--Projections of (...)
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  43. Greenberg, Kant, and Aesthetic Judgments of Modernist Art.Robert R. Clewis - 2008 - AE: Canadian Aesthetics Journal 18.
  44.  20
    The senses of modernism: Technology, perception and aesthetics.Mark W. D. Paterson - 2003 - British Journal of Aesthetics 43 (4):424-427.
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  45. Fabio Akcelrud Durao, Modernism and Coherence: Four Chapters of a Negative Aesthetics Reviewed by.Jeffrey Atteberry - 2009 - Philosophy in Review 29 (3):175-177.
     
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  46. Fabio Akcelrud Durao, Modernism and Coherence: Four Chapters of a Negative Aesthetics.Jeffrey Atteberry - 2009 - Philosophy in Review 29 (3):175.
     
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  47.  9
    On modernism.Jürgen Klein - 2019 - New York: Peter Lang.
    Modernism in British arts, literature and philosophy is manifest as a unique thing around and after 1900. This paradigm shift in all arts and modern science made traditional beliefs, norms, and social patterns obsolete. Forerunners were 19th century intellectuals, who favoured a new and lively spiritual culture. A new concept of reality changed the view of nature (atomic physics) but also structure and gist of literature. As the belief in the visible world declined, consciousness and symbolism (surface and depth (...)
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  48. Five faces of modernity: modernism, avant-garde, decadence, kitsch, postmodernism.Matei Călinescu - 1987 - Durham: Duke University Press. Edited by Matei Călinescu.
    _Five Faces of Modernity_ is a series of semantic and cultural biographies of words that have taken on special significance in the last century and a half or so: _modernity_, _avant-garde_, _decadence_, _kitsch_, and _postmodernism_. The concept of modernity—the notion that we, the living, are different and somehow superior to our predecessors and that our civilization is likely to be succeeded by one even superior to ours—is a relatively recent Western invention and one whose time may already have passed, if (...)
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  49.  22
    Phenomenology, modernism and beyond.Carole Bourne-Taylor & Ariane Mildenberg (eds.) - 2010 - New York: Peter Lang.
    CAROLE BOURNE-TAYLOR AND ARIANE MILDENBERG Introduction: Phenomenology, Modernism and Beyond Etat Present It was at the Eleventh Virginia Woolf Conference ...
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  50.  20
    Modernism and nihilism.Shane Weller - 2011 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    At the heart of some of the most influential strands of philosophical, political, and aesthetic modernism lies the conviction that modernity is fundamentally nihilistic. This book offers a wide-ranging critical history of the concept of nihilism from its origins in French Revolutionary discourse to its place in recent theorizations of the postmodern. Key moments in that history include the concept's appropriation by political activists in mid-nineteenth-century Russia, by Nietzsche in the 1880s, by the European avant-garde and 'high' modernists in (...)
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