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World History Course 6.13: Postwar Creative Responses 28 Views


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Description:

The artists, writers, and thinkers of the post-WWI world were undoubtedly brilliant. They were also about as fun as a funeral.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

the creative scene after World War one was very angsty. and of course

00:07

artists and intellectuals were feeling pretty blue. no one likes a war not even

00:12

if it inspires some cool war poetry. but these folks believed that the war had [poetry pictured]

00:16

occurred because leaders and nations engaged in the same destructive

00:19

behaviors over and over agai.n the creative class thought that this was far

00:24

more tragic than the war itself. and so artistically speaking they decided to

00:28

toss out the old and bring in the new. artists rebelled against realism and

00:33

instead embraced fantasy worlds. Mordor Narnia Oh different types of fantasy

00:39

world. our bad. they passed over the pastels for bold colors and distorted

00:44

lines. Architects wanted nothing to do with the grandiose structures that

00:48

hearkened back to colonial empires. instead they focused on saving money and

00:53

inspiring efficiency by using new industrial materials to build. well

00:58

Marcel Duchamp was a painter and sculptor who played with plastic and [Duchamp pictured]

01:02

cubes. Pablo Picasso was one of the most famous artists of the 20th century. his

01:08

1937 painting Guernica is one of the best depictions of the destructive power

01:12

of war in existence. as for the german walter gropius he was one of the

01:17

founding fathers of modern architecture. the writers of the post-world War one

01:22

era were all about despair fear and loss. these pen and paper pushers who came of

01:27

age during the conflict were so enthralled by these themes that they

01:30

took to calling themselves the lost generation. someone lend them a GPS there

01:36

stat. Ernest Hemingway was an ambulance driver turned author who got hurt in the

01:41

war and went on to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. if you haven't read the [Hemingway pictured]

01:44

old man in the sea then you have a far kinder English teacher than we did. F

01:49

scott Fitzgerald wrote The Great Gatsby. he wrote some other stuff too but the

01:53

tragic tale of Jay gat is the one you've heard of. Gertrude Stein was an American

01:58

pioneer of modernist literature who ditched medical school for Paris in 1903.

02:03

and William Butler Yeats was an Irish poet who helped found the National

02:07

Theatre of Ireland and won the Nobel Prize in Literature. we've talked about

02:12

the doers and analysts about the thinkers. well Albert

02:15

Einstein was just awesome. seriously go and read his general theory

02:18

of relativity. it's beautiful. Friedrich Nietzsche was a german philosopher who

02:23

died in 1900. so why are we including him here? because his work was incredibly [Nietzsche pictured]

02:27

influential in good ways and bad after his death. and then there was Sigmund

02:32

Freud who came up with psychoanalysis and the Oedipus complex amongst other

02:37

things. clearly World War 1 provided fertile soil for the creative talents of

02:41

the Western world. it's nice to know the war didn't kill everything? right? [men cut down apple trees]

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