ABSTRACT

This book identifies the—now moribund—Modernist spirit of the twentieth century, with its "make it new" attitude in the arts, and its tendency towards abstraction and the scientific process, as the impetus behind the academic structures of universities and museums, together with the development of discrete scholarly disciplines such as literary theory, sociology, and art history based on quasi-scientific principles. Arguing that the Modernist project is approaching exhaustion and that the insights that it has left to yield are approaching triviality, it explores the Modernist links between the arts and academic pursuits of the West—and their relationship with street protests—in the long twentieth century, considering what might follow this Modernist era. An examination of the broad cultural and intellectual—and now political—trends of our age, and their decline, The End of the Modernist Era in Arts and Academia will appeal to scholars and students of social theory, philosophy, literary studies, and cultural studies.

part I|41 pages

What Hath Modernism Wrought?

chapter 1|8 pages

Beyond Romanticism

chapter 2|6 pages

Movements

chapter 3|7 pages

Why Modernism?

chapter 4|11 pages

Academia

chapter 5|7 pages

Museums

part II|27 pages

Abstraction

chapter 6|8 pages

Explanation

chapter 7|7 pages

Science Envy

chapter 8|5 pages

Offended? You Win!

chapter 9|5 pages

Life After Modernism

part III|38 pages

The Spectrum of Disciplines

chapter 10|15 pages

Personal and Impersonal

chapter 11|15 pages

Fundamental Rules

chapter 12|6 pages

Verifiability

part IV|36 pages

Words in the World

chapter 13|9 pages

Form Follows Function

chapter 14|13 pages

The Cloud

chapter 15|6 pages

Circumstances

chapter 16|6 pages

What Is the Self?