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European Social and Cultural Trends

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Title: European Social and Cultural Trends


1
European Social and Cultural Trends
  • Late 20th Century

2
European Population Trends
  • European birth rates are for the most part
    dropping
  • Europe has an aging population

3
Migration of 20th Century People
  • Decolonization led people to leave colonies and
    return to their homeland (e.g. Great Britain
    received thousands of immigrants from its former
    colonies in the Caribbean, Africa, and India
  • Racial tensions arrive as many working class
    people resent the new immigrants
  • Extreme right-wing group National Front in France
    runs Jean-Marie Le Pen in a losing election to
    Jacques Chirac in 2002
  • Similar racist movements arise in many other
    European countries

4
The New Muslim Population
  • Immigration of Muslims into Europe come from two
    chief sources
  • European economic growth labor shortages lead
    some European nations to invite guest workers
    to their country
  • Decolonization Muslims from India and Africa
    come to Britain, while Muslims from Algeria come
    to France

Salman Rushdie, Muslim Indian-British author of
The Satanic Verses
5
Muslim Culture
  • Muslim immigrants for the most part remain
    unassimilated and self-contained, with the women
    remaining at home
  • European Muslims are not homogeneous coming from
    different class countries, class backgrounds and
    different Islamic traditions
  • The presence of foreign-born Muslims whose labor
    is necessary for the prosperity of the European
    economy is a major issue in contemporary Europe.
  • Many of these Muslims, such as these women, live
    in self-contained communities.

6
Christians of the 20th Century and Today
  • Neo-Orthodoxy presented by Karl Barth, it
    reemphasized the transcendence of God and the
    dependence of humankind on the divine
  • Liberal theology Paul Tillich, Rudolf Bultmann,
    John Robinson and C.S. Lewis all regarded
    religion as a human phenomenon, where divinity is
    sought in human nature and culture

7
Vatican II
  • A Roman Catholic reform movement
  • More liberal ideas in recent times have included
    Mass celebrated in the vernacular languages and
    freer relations with other Christian
    denominations and Judaism
  • Conservative ideas kept celibacy of priests,
    prohibition on abortion and birth control, and no
    women priests
  • Pope John Paul II emphasized the traditionalist
    doctrine, firm stands against communism and
    growth of the church in the non-Western world ,
    while emphasizing social justice

8
  • Throughout his pontificate John Paul II continued
    a close relationship with his native Poland to
    which he made several visits.
  • The earliest of these was important in
    demonstrating the authority of the church against
    Polish communist authorities.
  • Shown here in his Polish visit of June 1999, the
    pope would celebrate mass before several hundred
    thousand Poles after the collapse of communism
    which had occurred a decade earlier.

9
Western Culture Feminism
  • Simone de Beauvoir wrote The Second Sex,
    exploring the differences being a women made in
    her life
  • feminist journals published starting in the
    1970s
  • emphasis in movement in women controlling their
    own lives

10
New Work Patterns
  • childcare demands decreased by compulsory
    education and better health care
  • some women financially felt they had to go to
    work
  • women go to work when their children are old
    enough to go to school
  • women go back to work after their children have
    grown
  • women have less children and have children later
    in life so there is an increase in the work force

11
Women in the New Eastern Europe
  • many of the nations have shown little concern for
    womens issues
  • economic difficulties in the region limited the
    amount health and welfare programs

12
Art Movements Modernism
  • The term encompasses the activities and output of
    those who felt the "traditional" forms of art,
    architecture, literature, religious faith, social
    organization and daily life were becoming
    outdated in the new economic, social and
    political conditions of an emerging fully
    industrialized world.
  • Modernism rejected the lingering certainty of
    Enlightenment thinking, and also that of the
    existence of a compassionate, all-powerful
    Creator.
  • This is not to say that all modernists or
    modernist movements rejected either religion or
    all aspects of Enlightenment thought, rather that
    modernism can be viewed as a questioning of the
    axioms of the previous age.
  • The modernist artists we have already studied
    included the works of post-impressionists,
    Dadaists, surrealists, etc.

13
Modern Thought
  • From a literary perspective, the main
    characteristics of modernism include
  • 1. an emphasis on impressionism and subjectivity
    in writing (and in visual arts as well) an
    emphasis on HOW seeing (or reading or perception
    itself) takes place, rather than on WHAT is
    perceived. An example of this would be
    stream-of-consciousness writing.
  • 2. a movement away from the apparent objectivity
    provided by omniscient third-person narrators,
    fixed narrative points of view, and clear-cut
    moral positions. Faulkner's multiply-narrated
    stories are an example of this aspect of
    modernism.
  • 3. a blurring of distinctions between genres, so
    that poetry seems more documentary (as in T.S.
    Eliot or ee cummings) and prose seems more poetic
    (as in Woolf or Joyce).
  • 4. an emphasis on fragmented forms, discontinuous
    narratives, and random-seeming collages of
    different materials.
  • 5. a tendency toward reflexivity, or
    self-consciousness, about the production of the
    work of art, so that each piece calls attention
    to its own status as a production, as something
    constructed and consumed in particular ways.
  • 6. a rejection of elaborate formal aesthetics in
    favor of minimalist designs (as in the poetry of
    William Carlos Williams) and a rejection, in
    large part, of formal aesthetic theories, in
    favor of spontaneity and discovery in creation.
  • 7. A rejection of the distinction between "high"
    and "low" or popular culture, both in choice of
    materials used to produce art and in methods of
    displaying, distributing, and consuming art.

14
T.S. Eliot The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
  • Modernist Poet
  • Lived in Europe in the early to mid 1900s
  • http//www.bartleby.com/198/1.html

15
E.E. Cummings Snow
  • SNOWcruisingw HisperfullydescBYS
    FLUTTERFULLY IF(endbegi ndesignb
    ecend)tanglespanglesofC omegoCRINGE
    WITHSlilt(-ing-lyfulof)!(srBIRDS BECAUSE
    AGAINSemarkables)h?ya(from no(into whe)re
    find)ndArEGLIB SCARCELYEST AMONGS FLOWERING

16
Existentialism
  • belief that holds human beings totally
    responsible for their acts and that this
    responsibility causes dread and anguish
  • Soren Kierkegaard Danish writer maintained
    Christianity could be grasped only by lives
    caught in extreme situations / questioned whether
    human beings are in control of their own destiny

17
Questioning of Rationalism by Existentialists
  • famous writers Martin Heidegger, Karl Jaspers,
    Jean-Paul Sartre, and Albert Camus all questioned
    the primacy of reason and scientific
    understanding
  • according to the existentialists, human beings
    are compelled to formulate their own ethical
    values and cannot depend on traditional religion,
    rational philosophy, intuition, or social customs
    for ethical guidance

Jean Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir
18
Post-Modernism
  • Postmodernism is a tendency in contemporary
    culture characterized by the rejection of
    objective truth and global cultural narrative.
  • It emphasizes the role of language, power
    relations, and motivations
  • in particular it attacks the use of sharp
    classifications such as male versus female,
    straight versus gay, white versus black, and
    imperial versus colonial.
  • Jaques Derrida and Michael Foucault are classic
    examples of postmodern philosophers
  • Had its height in the 1960s-1990s

19
Art since World War II
  • Cultural divisions and the Cold War
  • Tatjiana Yablonskaya in Bread (1949), showed the
    realistic propaganda of the Stalinist regime
  • Jackson Pollack in One(1950), he showed the
    exuberance and freedom of abstract drip painting

20
More Postmodern Art Jackson Pollack
  • During the late 1940s and early 1950s Pollock's
    radical approach to painting revolutionized the
    potential for all Contemporary art that followed
    him.
  • To some extent Pollock realized that the journey
    toward making a work of art was as important as
    the work of art itself.
  • Pollacks work No. 5

21
Pop Art
  • The term "Pop Art" was used to describe paintings
    that celebrated consumerism of the post World War
    II era.
  • This movement rejected Abstract expressionism and
    its focus on the psychological interior, in favor
    of art which depicted, and often celebrated
    material consumer culture, advertising, and
    iconography of the mass production age
  • One way that Pop art is postmodern is that it
    breaks down what Andreas Huyssen calls the "Great
    Divide" between high art and popular culture
  • Made famous by Andy Warhol and others

22
Minimalism
  • Rachel Whiteread used the art concept of
    minimalism (the movement in architecture to
    remove from an object as many features as
    possible while retaining the objects form) in
    her Nameless Library which commemorates the
    65,000 Austrian Jews killed by Nazi Germany

23
Post-Minimalism
  • Performance art that changed with environmental
    conditions.
  • Brought attention to environmental conditions

24
Americanization of Europe
  • the spread of American influences in the economy,
    military, and culture to Europe
  • companies such as McDonalds , Apple. Starbucks,
    and the Gap have outlets all over Europe
  • music, movies and television shows from the U.S.
    have also come to Europe
  • has been met by some resentment by people who do
    not want to lose their European culture

25
Environmentalism
  • concerns about pollution grows in the 1970s and
    1980s
  • Green Party an influential political party that
    started in Germany and were concerned about
    global warming and pollution
  • Green movement is anti-capitalist and
    anti-nuclear
  • Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Russia in 1986
    raised questions about nuclear power that Europe
    could not ignore

26
In 1989, when a supertanker spilled 35,000 tons
of crude oil into Alaskas Prince William Sound,
rescue workers struggled to save the lives of
seabirds and animals. Nevertheless, thousands
died. Ron Levy/Liaison Agency, Inc.
27
The Computer Age
  • late nineteenth century the invention of the
    calculator improves businesses and the cash
    register appears in the late 1920s
  • first actual computer Electronic Numerical
    Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) built for
    ballistics calculations for the U.S. army in 1946
  • dates
  • 1960s invention of the bitmap to cover the
    screen, the mouse and the microchip
  • 1982 IBM produces small personal computer
  • 1984 Apple produces the Macintosh computer
    for a desktop at home or office and set for
    commercial sales becomes available
  • mid-1980s computer sales boom
  • mid 1990s - present the internet boom

28
The earliest computers were very large. Here in a
1946 photograph J. Presper Eckert and J. W.
Mauchly stand by the Electronic Numerical
Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) which was
dedicated at the University of Pennsylvania Moore
School of Electrical Engineering.
CORBIS/Bettmann
29
Modern Art
  • Art in the current day tends to use common
    objects in new ways and to use computers to
    synthesize new ways of looking at things

30
More Modern Art
31
Photorealism
  • Realism has made a resurgence as well with
    Photorealism
  • Yes, this is an oil painting not a photograph
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