MODERNISM
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
        
        
        Modernism is a philosophical movement that, along with cultural trends 
        and changes, arose from wide-scale and far-reaching transformations in 
        Western society in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Among the factors 
        that shaped modernism were the development of modern industrial societies 
        and the rapid growth of cities, followed then by the horror of World War 
        I. Modernism also rejected the certainty of Enlightenment thinking, and 
        many modernists rejected religious belief.[2][3]
      Modernism, in general, includes the activities and creations 
        of those who felt the traditional forms of art, architecture, literature, 
        religious faith, philosophy, social organization, activities of daily 
        life, and even the sciences, were becoming ill-fitted to their tasks and 
        outdated in the new economic, social, and political environment of an 
        emerging fully industrialized world. The poet Ezra Pound's 1934 injunction 
        to "Make it new!" was the touchstone of the movement's approach 
        towards what it saw as the now obsolete culture of the past. In this spirit, 
        its innovations, like the stream-of-consciousness novel, atonal (or pantonal) 
        and twelve-tone music, divisionist painting and abstract art, all had 
        precursors in the 19th century.
      A notable characteristic of modernism is self-consciousness 
        and irony concerning literary and social traditions, which often led to 
        experiments with form, along with the use of techniques that drew attention 
        to the processes and materials used in creating a painting, poem, building, 
        etc.[4] Modernism explicitly rejected the ideology of realism[5][6][7] 
        and makes use of the works of the past by the employment of reprise, incorporation, 
        rewriting, recapitulation, revision and parody.[8][9][10]