Minds at War: How Great Artists and Their Work Were Shaped by the First World War

Minds at War: How Great Artists and Their Work Were Shaped by the First World War

by Elif Shafak, Fintan O'Toole, Ruth Padel, David Edgerton, Heather Jones, Sara LeFanu

Tytuł oryginalny
Atomic Habits
Język oryginału
Angielski
Liczba stron
320
Wydawnictwo
Avery

O tej książce

The complete BBC Radio 3 series exploring how great creative minds responded to the First World War in individual works of art and scholarship.World War I saw an unprecedented loss of life in Western Europe, and destruction on a scale no one alive had ever seen. All those who experienced it were irrevocably changed, including many writers and artists upon whose oeuvre it left an indelible mark.This captivating series examines the impact of the war on artists and thinkers through the prism of their great works. In each episode, a leading figure from the worlds of science, culture and the arts reflects on a single iconic piece, and discusses how the events of 1914-18 shaped its creation.The 29 artworks in this collection comprise paintings, plays, books, films, sculptures and cartoons. Ian Christie appraises Eisenstein's seminal Soviet drama Battleship Potemkin; Dame Gillian Beer considers Virginia Woolf's masterpiece Mrs Dalloway; Fintan O'Toole decodes James Joyce's epic modernist novel, Ulysses and Dr Heather Jones looks at the controversy and war connections around Marcel Duchamp's notorious 'Fountain'.Key texts such as Sigmund Freud's twin essays Thoughts for the Time on War and Death; Rabindranath Tagore's Nobel Lectures and Siegfried Sassoon's celebrated 1917 protest letter to The Times are analysed by Dr Michael Shapira, Santanu Das and Joanna Bourke and a panoply of other pieces, among them Kathe Kollwitz's 'The Grieving Parents', Sean O'Casey's The Silver Tassie and Rudyard Kipling's Epitaphs are discussed by experts including Ruth Padel, Elizabeth Kuti and Janet Montefiore.Powerful, moving, thought-provoking and often shocking, these landmark works are all, in their very different ways, a response to the horrors of World War I and its aftermath—one that vividly demonstrates the transformative effects the conflict had on the collective artistic psyche.Production Presented by Allan Little, Sara LeFanu, Martin Rowson, Prof David Edgerton, Michal Shapira, Dr Heather Jones, Ian Christie, Lyse Doucet, Santanu Das, Ruth Padel, Arthur Smith, Prof Gillian Beer, Richard Cork, Sasha Dugdale, Fintan O'Toole, Gerald Dawe, John D McHugh, Elizabeth Kuti, Tarek Osman, Joanna Bourke, Elif Shafak, Dr Imaobong Umoren, Janet Montefiore, Jane Potter and Alex Walton.Produced by Beaty Rubens, Benedict Warren, Emma Kingsley, Simon Elmes and Sarah Bowen.Episode 1. Paths of Glory2. Non-Combatants and Others3. Der Krieg4. The Memorandum on the Neglect of Science5. Thoughts for the Times on War and Death6. Le Feu7. Battleship Potemkin8. Fighting France, from Dunkerque to Belfort9. The Broken Wing10. The Grieving Parents11. Tagore's Nobel Lectures12. Tzara's Dada Manifests13. Woolf's Mrs Dalloway14. Parade15. Akhmatova's July 191416. James Joyce's Ulysses17. Elizabeth Bowen's The Last September18. Francis Ledwidge's poem O'Connell Street19. Father Browne's Photograph of a Wounded Soldier20. Sean O'Casey's The Silver Tassie21. Marcel Duchamp22. Gertrude Bell23. Siegfried Sassoon's Letter to The Times24. Mata Hari's Final Performance25. Isaac Rosenberg's Dead Man's Dump26. WEB Dubois' Returning Soldiers27. Rudyard Kipling's Epitaphs28. Mary Borden's The Forbidden Zone29. Isobel Rae

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