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| Cultural movement that rejected both Greco-Roman classicism and the Judeo-Christian tradition |
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| 3 major forces that helped shape events between 1871 and 1914 |
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Definition
imperialism militariism nationalism |
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| Europed witnessed the growing political power of the middle class between |
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| What played a larger role in the second industrial revolution than in the First Industrial Revolution |
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| Many Europeans moved to cities between 1871 and 1914 because |
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| Urban jobs paid better than those in the country |
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| Life in the growing cities of the late 19th century provided women with new oppurtunities for |
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Definition
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| In the 2nd industrial revolution, women experienced what |
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Definition
| new careers including teaching, nursing, and retailing |
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| A social change that occured between 1871 and 1914 |
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Definition
| the establishment of public school systems |
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| Countries that comprimised the Triple Entente |
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| France, Great Britain, and Russia |
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| Unlike Germany and France, Great Britain during the 1871-1914 period |
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| had mores success reforming the living conditions of the poor |
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| The city that epitomized modernism during the period |
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Definition
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| European nations between 1871 and 1914 shifted their interests from |
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Definition
| domestic affairs and the global economy |
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Term
| When the Industrial Revolution came to Russia |
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Definition
| the government became more opressive and dicatorial |
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Term
| major cause of late 19th century imperialism |
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Definition
| industrialized nations require new markets |
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Term
| developed a theory of universal collected unconscious |
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| The immediate cause of World war 1 |
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| quarrel between Austria and Serbia |
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| characterized by a yearning to move an uncertain but exciting future |
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Definition
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| Early Modernisms optimism about the future was reinforced by |
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Definition
| advances in science and technology |
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Term
| Nietzche's life and thought are ironical in what way |
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Definition
| He was an opponent of a strong German state, his writings were later taken up by the Nazis, who advocated a unified Germany |
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Term
| Nietsche and Freud explored |
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Definition
| beneath the surface of human motices to find the underlying truth. |
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Term
| Freud thought that human personality was |
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Definition
| the product of an inescapable struggle between inborn instincts and a culturally-created conscience. |
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Term
| The three styles of early modernist literature are |
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Definition
| naturalism, decadence, expressionism. |
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Term
| Kate Chopin can be described as |
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Definition
| a writer moving away from romanticism and toward realism and naturalism. |
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Term
| Zola’s novels express naturalism by |
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| exploring serious social issues. |
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| Ibsen’s A Doll’s House is written in which style? |
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Definition
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| The hero in Huysmans’s Against Nature expresses what decadence means by |
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| cultivating unfashionable and exotic pleasures. |
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| An example of decadence in literature is |
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Definition
| Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray. |
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| An example of expressionism in literature is |
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Definition
| Strindberg’s The Dream Play. |
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Term
| Kafka’s novel The Trial and novella “Metamorphosis” have which modernist theme? |
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Definition
| a person victimized by forces beyond the individual human’s control |
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Term
| The first scientist to win two Nobel Prizes for science was |
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Term
| Max Planck is credited with |
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Definition
| establishing the quantum theory of radiation. |
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| explained the behavior of electrons at the subatomic level. |
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| Whose groundbreaking research was rediscovered by three researchers in 1900, and became the basis for the new science of genetics? |
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| Impressionist painters were innovative because |
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Definition
| they painted out of doors, not in their studios |
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Term
| The impressionists were influenced by the |
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| The first critics of impressionist painting ridiculed the new style as being |
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| Which of Monet's paintings became a rallying cry for his fellow artists |
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Definition
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| Renoirs painting style can be described as |
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Definition
| moving beyond impressionalism to a greater concentration on form |
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Term
| One of the results of the impressionist movement |
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Definition
| art was freed to move in many directions |
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| The leading painter of postimpressionism |
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Definition
| Cezzanne, Gaguin, Van Gogh |
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Term
| Cezanne's paintings pointed the way to the twentieth centrury's |
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Definition
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Term
| Van Gogh launched the postimpressionist trend in painting called |
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| In painting, representing the emotions |
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| Which impressionist artist was the first to imitate ukiyo-e prints |
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| Which architect coined the phrase "form follow function" |
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| A characteristics of expressionist music |
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Definition
| an abscence of harmonious frames of reference |
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Term
| What was the most striking feature of expressionist music |
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Definition
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| West African and African-Carribean rhythms |
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