They are types of architectural styles of the early 1900s.
They are literature movements that occurred in the 1900s and early 2000s
Aplus
The 1920s included:The Great Depressiontension between modernism and fundamentalismrebellion
he IS a trusted member
Form over function
Sioux warriors
no lol
Modernism and postmodernism are philosophical views. Modernism attempts to improve daily life with technological advances whole postmodernism attempts to create progressive movements.
which best describes postmodernism
The simplest and broadest way to look at Modernism is to think of it as an artistic theory or perspective that respects but transcends tradition and traditional theories, often pushing the bounds in wildly unexpected, avant-garde, and intellectual ways. Modernism also has great respect for the work of art itself, considered apart from the Artist, from the Audience, and from the Universe (other literary theories are more focused on the relation of the object to one of these dimensions). This aspect of Modernism is heavily related to Structuralism. Some prominent Modernists are James Joyce, Ezra Pound, TS Eliot, EE Cummings, and Franz Kafka. (I'd tell you painters but I don't know much about visual art). Postmodernism is often confused with Modernism. Postmodernism is a reaction to Modernism, as Modernism is a reaction to the theories before it, but where Modernism transcends the previous theories, Postmodernism rejects them outright and seeks to establish its own. The field of Postmodernism attacks anything concrete (especially absolute truths and binaries), arguing that (almost) anything can be reduced to a "social construct." Postmodernism is hazy at best and has all been done before by Modernism.
The 1920s included:The Great Depressiontension between modernism and fundamentalismrebellion
Abstract Experimental Fragmented good luck on your classes :)
A conditional statement
A conditional statement.
They became culturally different from one another.
As a movement, modernism is best defined as a __reaction
primary
None of them.
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