Cosmopolitanism and the Avant-garde, 1900-1939
H620 (also H645, H680, H745, CULS C701)
Graduate Colloquium in European History

Professor Marci Shore
spring semester 2003-2004
Wednesdays, 7-9pm, Ballantine Hall 742

office Ballantine 833; tel. 855-8036
mshore@indiana.edu
office hours Thursdays 9-11

This course will explore European cultural and intellectual history from the fin-de-siècle through the interwar years.  The primary focus will be East-Central Europe, although there will be readings on Western Europe and the Russian empire/Soviet Union as well.  Topics include Isaac Deutscher’s notion of the “non-Jewish Jew;” tensions between cosmopolitanism and national identity; literary and linguistic avant-garde movements including formalism, structuralism, dada, futurism, semiotics, "trans-sense" poetry; and the avant-gardists' respective ideological, aesthetic, and linguistic programs as they responded to a polarizing political spectrum and a perceived crisis of modernity, to a sense of Europe at the brink of both catastrophe and infinite possibilities, to the Russian Revolution and the rise of fascism, to nihilism and revolution.   Can be taken for seminar credit with the permission of the instructor. 

course requirements:  Participation in class discussion (obviously); two book reviews (one in Slavic Review style, one in Times Literary Supplement style); one final paper dealing with the literature we’ve read (the exact topic can be chosen by you, but this should be a literature/historiographical review, not a research paper—with the exception of those of you who are taking the course for seminar credit).  Students will also be assigned oral presentations on the readings.  You can choose any two books you like for the book reviews, but you must turn in the review in class on the day we are discussing that book.  Final papers are due

books ordered:

Schorske, Fin-de-siècle Vienna
Mary Gluck, Georg Lukács and His Generation
John Lukacs, Budapest 1900
Peter Gay, Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider
Oleh Ilnytzkyj, Ukrainian Futurism: 1914-1930: A Historical and Critical Study
Jeff Veidlinger, The Moscow State Yiddish Theater
Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, In 1926
Roman Jakobson, My Futurist Years
Victor Margolin, The Struggle for Utopia
Jindrich Toman, The Magic of a Common Language


January 14: Cosmopolitanism

Isaac Deutscher, “The Non-Jewish Jew”


January 21: The imperial capital

Schorske, Fin-de-siècle Vienna


January 28: Zeitgeist of the fin-de-siècle

John Lukacs, Budapest 1900


February 4: coming to Marxism

Mary Gluck, Georg Lukács and His Generation


February 11: Mayakovsky and his circle

Roman Jakobson, My Futurist Years


February 18: Czech structuralism

Jindrich Toman, The Magic of a Common Language


February 25: Manifesto as genre

F.T. Marinetti, “Destruction of Syntax-Imagination Without Strings—Words-in-Freedom”
F.T. Marinetti, “The Foundation and Manifesto of Futurism”
Mayakovsky, et al, “A Slap in the Face of Public Taste”
Guillaume Apollinaire, “The New Spirit and the Poets”
Oswald Spengler, from The Decline of the West
Alexei Kruchenykh, excerpts from Our Arrival: From the History of Russian Futurism
Peter Nichollls, “A Metaphysics of Modernity: Marinetti and Italian Futurism” in Modernisms: A Literary Guide


March 3: Aleksander Wat and Polish futurism

Aleksander Wat, “The Eternally Wandering Jew”
Aleksander Wat, My Century
Tomas Venclova, chapter on Piecyk
Bogdana Carpenter, excerpt from The Poetic Avant-garde in Poland


March 10: Futurism in
Ukraine

Oleh Ilnytzkyj, Ukrainian Futurism: 1914-1930: A Historical and Critical Study


March 17: no class, spring break


March 24:
Theories of utopia

Victor Margolin, The Struggle for Utopia


March 31: Zeitgeist of the interwar years

Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, In 1926


April 7: Decadence and alienation

Peter Gay, Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider


April 14: The Yiddish avant-garde

Hillel Kazovsky, The Artists of the Kultur-Lige
Seth Wolitz, “The Jewish National Art Renaissance in Russia
The Dybbuk (film?)


April 21: The avant-garde and Soviet culture

Jeff Veidlinger, The Moscow State Yiddish Theater


April 28: presentations on final papers


final
papers are due Monday May 3rd