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COURSE DESCRIPTION

 

In the aftermath of the First World War, Paris became the place where artists and writers from all over the world came to share ideas, innovate, and create new forms of art, or simply enjoy life and peace after years of suffering. Some of the most famous works of art and pieces of literature in the 20th century were produced during the decade 1919-1929. Most of the artistic movements that arose during what is now known as the Jazz Age or the Roaring Twenties in the United States (“les années folles” in French) were a reaction to the forms and ways of thinking that had led—according to their detractors—directly to the war and its horrors. Therefore, art and literature, pushed by the development of neurosciences and physics and the new visions of the world that they implied, sought new ways of expression. Additionally, the emergence of jazz, recently imported from the United States through American troops, contributed to the general frenzy and feeling of insouciance (carelessness) that permeated the French society at the time.

 

It is the story of these people and the changes they brought forth that this class will tell, through a survey and the analysis of works of literature, paintings, architecture, newspaper articles, and short films, among other documents. Throughout the class, students will reflect on the reasons that made Paris, of all European cities, the center of such revolutions as well as the chosen place for many disillusioned young people such as the writers of the Lost Generation.

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