FROM EDWARD VII TO WORLD WAR I
The death of Queen Victoria seemed to mark
the end of an era, even if all the attitudes defined as "Victorian" disappeared
gradually.
She was succeeded by Edward VII. During his
reign there weren't political changes till the election of Liberal Party. Different
reforms were introduced:
to protect trade unions
to protect children with medical service in school
to protect people over 70 with the pension
introduced the eight hours working day
were given insurance to the working class
But it was a time of industrial
unrest, strikes and violence.
Violence from woman: they were arguing
in favour of voting rights for women since the 1860s, but none gave much
attention to them until in 1903, when 2 ladies founded the Women's social and political Union.
An interesting Constitutional development
took place when the liberal chancellor Lloyd declared his intention to favour
the poor and penalise the rich by taxing "unearned", but Conservative Party
rejected it and a struggle took place in the Parliament that stopped with Parliament Act, which
made impossible for the Lords to reject a finance bill and restricted their
veto.
FOREIGN POLICY
Europe was divided into 2 rivals camps:
Triple Alliance:
Germany, Austria, Italy
Triple Entente: Britain, France,
Russia
The rivality between Russia and Austria
over the Slav State
of Serbia led a war when an
Austrian archduke was assassinated in Sarajevo.
Russia defended Serbia and Germany was against them.
When Germany
marched through Belgium, a neutral
territory, to attack France,
Britain declared war on Germany.
BRITAIN
AT WAR
The war caused:
The ruin of a great empire
Made possible a communist revolution in Russia
Prepared the rise of dictators
Mussolini and Hitler
The consequences
in Britain
was:
q
Political and economical
destruction
q
Poverty, unemployment, social
unrest
q
Industrial crisis
q
The loss of Britain leading
position on the international scene
The country was unprepared.
At first the soldiers were
volunteers, but when they became insufficient a Military service Act forced men to
enlist.
Thanks to the American troops Germany
surrendered. Peace treaty was signed at Versailles
in 1919.
In Geneva
were established the League of Nations; it aims were
to preserve international peace
guarantee all nations against aggressions
but the League had two points of weakness:
its constitution was very vague
not all the great power were members
It wasn't a success.
THE 20S AND THE 30S
SOCIETY
THE MODERN AGE
I would like to talk about the
years after first world war and why they are defined
as a age of anxiety.
Generally we talk about anxiety when our future is obscure and we don't know
about something.
The Victorian values disappeared and the mind
of Victorian people there the idea that the material gain must be balanced
against spiritual loss. The positivistic view of life in progress and science
had led believe that all human misery would be swept away.
But first
world war was felt like a frustration and nothing seemed to be certain;
even science and religion
seemed to offer comfort or security; scientist and philosophers destroyed the
old universe and new views
of man emerged.
FREUD
He discovered the unconscious:
not a new idea but he described it in a scientific way giving scientific exation:
Ø
conscious mind is dominated and controlled by reason and works according to reason, logic cause
and effect .
Ø
unconscious is apart of mind
that we cannot control
because we don't know; all our emotions, feelings, impulses, memories are free
to associate without a precise order; unconscious mind works according to the Law of free association
of ideas and is revealed through analysis of dreams.
JUNG
He was the continuator of
Freud's studies and he introduced the concept of Collective Unconscious: memory contains the
beliefs of human race, which operates on a symbolical level: some ures of
the everyday world had symbolic power and people respond to them unconsciously.
EINSTEIN
He discovered relativity in science:
putting in discussion scientific entities, time and space, he said that they
have not an absolute meaning but they are related with a specific point of
view.
JAMES AND BERGSON
They questioned the idea of time. The first
said that our mind records every experience in a continuum. The second distinguished:
historical time: external, linear, and measured in terms of spatial distance
psychological time: internal, subjective, measured by the relative emotional
intensity of a moment.
FRAZER
He helped to eliminate the absolute truth of religion
and ethical systems in favour of more relativist points of view.
NIETZSCHE
He affirmed that God was dead and that
Christians had to lose the faith in a God's grace. A new alternative to
Christianity was esoteric beliefs.
MARX
He had a negative vision of religion
and he believed that people used religion to justify injustice and
exploitation. He considered religion as the opium of people.
DIFFERENT PICTURES OF MAN
Marx: man was the object of
conflicting socio-economic forces and was conditioned by them, so he wasn't the
agent of his destiny but man was dominated by elements he could not control.
Freud: vision of man-object, he is apart of nature a
psychological phenomenon.
All the certainties a man believed
in fall down and he wasn't ready to replace the old values with new ones; this
generated a deep feeling of anxiety.
In art: the attention shifted from the exterior to interior,
from objective to
subjective view of existence, so moral and religion became a personal
search.
Peter: he said that "experience was reduced to a swam of impressions" and every impression is the
impression of the individual in his isolation.
This new sensibility developed radical innovations about form of
language.
MODERNISM
It use to
define the innovative
trends in all the areas of art which emerged in Europe and USA in the
first decade of 20th century. It wasn't characterised by a uniform
style but it includes: symbolism, post-impressionism, futurism, expressionism,
surrealism .
Modernist artist reacted against the limitation of
pessimism and the view which limited the interpretation of the new and complex
reality.
Realism and naturalism, that based
their faith on scientific analysis and deterministic interpretation of human
behaviour, lost their function.
Aestheticism had placed excessive
attention on beauty and form as supreme values.
Symbolism gave artist the first
impulse to experiment with language
techniques to communicate beyond a conventional use:
used
to convey a complex texture of emotions simultaneously
techniques
of illusions, opposition and association
use
of correspondences, symbols
recourse
to musical patterns