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The First Moderns - Profiles in the Origins of Twentieth-Century Thought
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In his introduction, Everdell makes the point that educated readers use the word modernism all the time, "possessed of certain spreadeagled definitions learned, perhaps, in courses in art history or 20th century fiction and reinforced by daily trips through the glass canyons of downtown." While Everdell dislikes loose, rangy definitions of modernism extrapolated from art alone, he relishes the fact that understanding modernism demands "a bit of everything" and a willingness to indulge in "wholesale crossing of what we have come, in the 20th century, to call `disciplinary barriers.' " Everdell himself crosses and recrosses those barriers, venturing from philosophy, mathematics and literature to science, art and politics. Rather than adopting an academic, theory-based approach, Everdell relies on narrative to illustrate the shift between 19th-century certainty and the atomized, self-referential, uncertain universe of the 20th century. Each self-contained chapter stands alone as an intellectual exploration of a particular idea, discovery, personality or event. Those chapters create some illuminating juxtapositions, as when the section on Ludwig Boltzmann and his research into molecular theory abuts one on Georges Seurat and pointillism. Everdell does not just discuss their achievements in their cultural contexts, however‘he narrates their discoveries. His approach has a certain humanizing immediacy, but the overall effect is discontinuous‘perhaps a reflection of modernism itself, but still frustrating in a book that purports to trace the history of an intellectual and artistic epoch. (June)

In this truly exciting study of the origins of modernist thought, poet and teacher Everdell (The End of Kings, 1983) roams freely across disciplinary lines, commenting on fields as disparate as mathematics and moving pictures, neuroscience and music, and literature and the concentration camps. He argues that the most original thinkers in the modern age (ca. 1870 to 1914) illuminated a shared perception of the world, pointing to a reality seen as fragmented and discontinuous, isolate, "digital" (yes/no, not flowing), and quantized. "Modernists dissect routinely and obsessively.... The intellectual world of Modernism is...a world of precise definition and separability." Some of the thinkers Everdell profiles include mathematician Georg Cantor, physicists Ludwig Bolzmann and Albert Einstein, Freud, Seurat and Picasso, Rimbaud and Whitman, Edwin S. Porter, and Merce Cunningham. A brilliant book that will prove useful to scholars and generalists for years to come; enthusiastically recommended.‘David Keymer, California State Univ., Stanislaus

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