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| Acclaimed
cultural historian Peter Gay traces and explores the rise of artistic Modernism,
the cultural movement that heralded and shaped the modern world, dominating western
high culture for over a century. Peter Gay's most ambitious endeavour since Freud
explores the shocking modernist rebellion that, beginning in the 1840s, transformed
art, literature, music, and film with its assault on traditional forms. Beginning
his epic study with Baudelaire, whose lurid poetry scandalised French stalwarts,
Gay traces the revolutionary path of modernism from its Parisian origins to its
emergence as the dominant cultural movement in world capitals such as Berlin and
New York.A work unique in its breadth and brilliance, "Modernism" presents
a thrilling pageant of heretics that includes (among others) Oscar Wilde, Pablo
Picasso, and D. W. Griffiths; James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and T. S. Eliot; Walter
Gropius, Arnold Schoenberg, and (of course!) Andy Warhol. Finally, Gay examines
the hostility of totalitarian regimes to modernist freedom and the role of Pop
Art in sounding the death knell of a movement that dominated Western culture for
120 years. Lavishly illustrated, "Modernism" is a superlative achievement
by one of our greatest historians. 
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