1 / 17

Post-Modernism/Contemporary Literature

Post-Modernism/Contemporary Literature. 1945-Present. Reaction to History. Major historical events often cause shifts in literary trends American Revolution- Deists to Rationalists Westward expansion- Rationalism to Romanticism Civil War- Romanticism to Realism WWI- Realism to Modernism

afi
Télécharger la présentation

Post-Modernism/Contemporary Literature

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Post-Modernism/Contemporary Literature 1945-Present

  2. Reaction to History • Major historical events often cause shifts in literary trends • American Revolution- Deists to Rationalists • Westward expansion- Rationalism to Romanticism • Civil War- Romanticism to Realism • WWI- Realism to Modernism • WWII leads to a shift away from Modernism towards Postmodernism

  3. From Gatsby to Ginsberg

  4. Post WWII • Economic Boom • Growth of suburbs • New technology • Within businesses and more consumer products • Cold War • Tension with communist countries, especially U.S.S.R. • Civil Rights Movement • Growing acceptance of individuals from diverse backgrounds

  5. 1950s Suburbia

  6. Cold War Propaganda

  7. Civil Rights

  8. Where are we currently? • It is debated whether Postmodernism is ongoing, or if there has been a shift to a new movement • Theory 1: • 1945-1980: Postmodernism • 1980-Present: Contemporary Literature (unnamed movement) • Theory 2: • 1945-Present: Postmodernism

  9. Characteristics of Postmodernism • Allows for multiple meanings and multiple worlds • dreams, the future, flashbacks etc. • Structures work in nontraditional forms • Varied chapter/section breaks • Multiple narrators/switching perspective • Comments upon itself • Encourages self-awareness • Cultural diversity • Blends and overlaps fiction and nonfiction • Rise of literary nonfiction and literary journalism

  10. Characteristics Continued • Cynicism towards society • Especially post Vietnam War • Recent texts critical of American consumer culture • Questioning/Lack of identity • Use of vernacular/sometimes shocking language • Especially prominent in poetry

  11. Popular Authors • Allen Ginsburg • Sylvia Plath • Flannery O’Connor • Toni Morrison • Alice Walker • Cormac McCarthy • Amy Tan • Tim O’Brien • Junot Diaz • Sandra Cisneros • JhumpaLahiri • Jonathan Franzen • Jonathan SafranFoer • George Saunders • Billy Collins • Gwendolyn Brooks

  12. Author Pictures

  13. The Rise of Young Adult Literature • The Catcher in the Rye (1951) and The Outsiders (1967) are early texts that lead to the burgeoning genre of young adult literature • Books targeted towards young adult interests and usually feature young adult protagonists • YAL has become a multi-million dollar industry • Film adaptations for popular novels, even sometimes before they are published

  14. Page to Screen

  15. Page to Screen

  16. Page to Screen

  17. Popular Titles • Series • Harry Potter • The Hunger Games • Divergent • Maze Runner • Mortal Instruments • The Giver • Ender’s Game • Twilight • Uglies • Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants • Inheritance Cycle • Crank • Individual Works • The Fault in Our Stars • Anything by John Green • The Perks of Being a Wallflower • Thirteen Reasons Why • The Book Thief • Speak • Holes • If I Stay • Feed • Eleanor and Park

More Related