Looking at the Master Narrative: A Possible Interpretation Strategy
Looking at the Master Narrative: A Possible Interpretation Strategy
Author(s): Miloš BralovićSubject(s): Music, Visual Arts
Published by: Fakultet za medije i komunikacije - Univerzitet Singidunum
Keywords: Modernism; narrative; fine arts; 20th century; Virginia Woolf; Arnold Schönberg; Vasily Kandinsky
Summary/Abstract: While re-thinking (or, from the perspective of our time, looking at) Modernism, and the concept of modernity, one must have in mind all the contradictions implied by the term. To paraphrase Susan Stanford Friedman, Modernism is (or was) both the culture of rebellion and ‘high’, elitist culture, both negation of tradition and a so-called master narrative. Modernism means different things to different people, but the problem is that, as Stanford Friedman points out, its definitions are not just different, but stand as opposites. Bearing that in mind, the main point of this paper is to try to define/explain/understand what the mentioned master narrative (in the Modernist practices of fine arts) is and how it was created. Is our re-thinking, or looking from a temporal distance, just a mere observation, or, is it inevitable to notice all the different narratives connected to different practices similarily to Jacques Derrida’s différence? In other words, were there that many narratives, would there even be a master one?
Journal: AM Časopis za studije umetnosti i medija
- Issue Year: 2018
- Issue No: 16
- Page Range: 1-10
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English