Modernism and the Avant-Gardes
Modernism was an international convulsion in the arts around the early twentieth century, and the avant-gardes — Futurism, Dada, Surrealism — pushed its experiments toward an assault on the institution of art itself. Comparing them tests how movements travel and differentiate across languages.
Definition
The comparative study of early-twentieth-century modernism and the avant-garde movements, examining their shared formal innovations, their differences, and their transnational circulation.
Scope
Covers the comparative study of literary modernism and the historical avant-gardes: their experimental break with tradition, transnational diffusion across European and other literatures, the distinction between modernism and the avant-garde, and the relation of both to broader modernity. Treats the movements as crossing national lines rather than belonging to one tradition.
Core questions
- What distinguishes modernism from the historical avant-gardes?
- What formal and intellectual commitments unite international modernism, and where do national variants diverge?
- How did avant-garde movements spread and transform across literatures?
- What was the relation between aesthetic experiment and the wider experience of modernity?
Key theories
- Theory of the avant-garde
- Bürger distinguished the historical avant-garde from modernism by its attack on the institution of art and its attempt to reintegrate art into life praxis, rather than merely renewing artistic form.
- Modernism as international movement
- Bradbury and McFarlane mapped modernism as a transnational constellation of experimental movements between roughly 1890 and 1930, emphasizing crisis, fragmentation, and formal innovation across Europe.
- Faces of modernity
- Calinescu separated modernism, avant-garde, decadence, kitsch, and postmodernism as distinct modern aesthetic formations, clarifying a frequently conflated vocabulary.
History
Modernist experiment and the avant-garde movements flourished across European and other literatures in the decades around 1900-1930. Their comparative theorization matured later: Bradbury and McFarlane's 1976 anthology framed modernism internationally, Bürger's 1974 German Theorie der Avantgarde (translated 1984) sharply distinguished avant-garde from modernism, and Calinescu's 1987 study disentangled the family of modern aesthetic terms.
Debates
- Modernism versus avant-garde
- Whether modernism and the historical avant-garde are the same phenomenon or, as Bürger argued, distinct in that only the avant-garde attacked the institution of art itself.
Key figures
- Peter Bürger
- Malcolm Bradbury
- James McFarlane
- Matei Calinescu
Related topics
Seminal works
- burger1984
- bradburymcfarlane1976
- calinescu1987
Frequently asked questions
- How is the avant-garde different from modernism?
- In Bürger's influential account, modernism renewed artistic forms within the institution of art, while the historical avant-garde (Dada, Surrealism, Futurism) attacked that institution and sought to dissolve the boundary between art and everyday life.