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Decadence

The word decadence, which at first meant simply "decline" in an abstract sense, is now most often used to refer to a perceived decay in standards, morals, dignity, religious faith, honour, discipline, or skill at governing among the members of the elite of a very large social structure, such as an empire or nation state. By extension, it may refer to a decline in art, literature, science, technology, and work ethics, or (very loosely) to self-indulgent behavior.

An orgy in Imperial Rome, by Henryk Siemiradzki
Romans during the Decadence, by Thomas Couture

Usage of the term sometimes implies moral censure, or an acceptance of the idea, met with throughout the world since ancient times, that such declines are objectively observable and that they inevitably precede the destruction of the society in question; for this reason, modern historians use it with caution. The word originated in Medieval Latin (dēcadentia), appeared in 16th-century French, and entered English soon afterwards. It bore the neutral meaning of decay, decrease, or decline until the late 19th century, when the influence of new theories of social degeneration contributed to its modern meaning.

The idea that a society or institution is declining is called declinism. This is the predisposition, caused by cognitive biases such as rosy retrospection, to view the past more favourably and future more negatively.[1][2][3] Declinism has been described as "a trick of the mind" and as "an emotional strategy, something comforting to snuggle up to when the present day seems intolerably bleak."[4] Other factors contributing to declinism include the reminiscence bump as well as both the positivity effect and negativity bias.[2][4][5]

In literature, the Decadent movement—late nineteenth century fin de siècle writers who were associated with Symbolism or the Aesthetic movement—was first given its name by hostile critics. Later it was triumphantly adopted by some of the writers themselves. The Decadents praised artifice over nature and sophistication over simplicity, defying contemporary discourses of decline by embracing subjects and styles that their critics considered morbid and over-refined. Some of these writers were influenced by the tradition of the Gothic novel and by the poetry and fiction of Edgar Allan Poe.

History

Ancient Rome

Decadence is a popular criticism of the culture of the later Roman Empire's elites, seen also in much of its earlier historiography and 19th and early 20th century art depicting Roman life. This criticism describes the later Roman Empire as reveling in luxury, in its extreme characterized by corrupting "extravagance, weakness, and sexual deviance", as well as "orgies and sensual excesses".[6][7][8][9][10]

Decadent movement

Decadence was the name given to a number of late nineteenth-century writers who valued artifice over the earlier Romantics' naïve view of nature. Some of them triumphantly adopted the name, referring to themselves as Decadents. For the most part, they were influenced by the tradition of the Gothic novel and by the poetry and fiction of Edgar Allan Poe, and were associated with Symbolism and/or Aestheticism.

This concept of decadence dates from the eighteenth century, especially from Montesquieu, and was taken up by critics as a term of abuse after Désiré Nisard used it against Victor Hugo and Romanticism in general. A later generation of Romantics, such as Théophile Gautier and Charles Baudelaire took the word as a badge of pride, as a sign of their rejection of what they saw as banal "progress." In the 1880s, a group of French writers referred to themselves as Decadents. The classic novel from this group is Joris-Karl Huysmans' Against Nature, often seen as the first great decadent work, though others attribute this honor to Baudelaire's works.

In Britain and Ireland the leading figure associated with the Decadent movement was Irish writer, Oscar Wilde. Other significant figures include Arthur Symons, Aubrey Beardsley and Ernest Dowson.

The Symbolist movement has frequently been confused with the Decadent movement. Several young writers were derisively referred to in the press as "decadent" in the mid-1880s. Jean Moréas' manifesto was largely a response to this polemic. A few of these writers embraced the term while most avoided it. Although the aesthetics of Symbolism and Decadence can be seen as overlapping in some areas, the two remain distinct.

1920s Berlin

This "fertile culture" of Berlin extended onwards until Adolf Hitler rose to power in early 1933 and stamped out any and all resistance to the Nazi Party. Likewise, the German far-right decried Berlin as a haven of vice.[clarification needed] A new culture had developed in and around Berlin throughout the previous decade, including architecture and design (Bauhaus, 1919–33), a variety of literature (Döblin, Berlin Alexanderplatz, 1929), film (Lang, Metropolis, 1927, Dietrich, Der blaue Engel, 1930), painting (Grosz), and music (Brecht and Weill, The Threepenny Opera, 1928), criticism (Benjamin), philosophy/psychology (Jung), and fashion.[citation needed] This culture was considered decadent and disruptive by rightists.[11]

Film was making huge technical and artistic strides during this period of time in Berlin, and gave rise to the influential movement called German Expressionism. "Talkies", the Sound films, were also becoming more popular with the general public across Europe, and Berlin was producing very many of them.

Berlin in the 1920s also proved to be a haven for English-language writers such as W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender and Christopher Isherwood, who wrote a series of 'Berlin novels', inspiring the play I Am a Camera, which was later adapted into a musical, Cabaret, and an Academy Award winning film of the same name. Spender's semi-autobiographical novel The Temple evokes the attitude and atmosphere of the place at the time.

21st century

Jacques Barzun

The historian Jacques Barzun (1907-2012) gives a definition of decadence which is independent from moral judgement. In his bestseller From Dawn to Decadence: 500 Years of Western Cultural Life[12] (published 2000) he describes decadent eras as times when "the forms of art as of life seem exhausted, the stages of development have been run through. Institutions function painfully." He emphasizes that "decadent" in his view is "not a slur" but "a technical label".

With reference to Barzun, New York Times columnist Ross Douthat characterises decadence as a state of "economic stagnation, institutional decay and cultural and intellectual exhaustion at a high level of material prosperity and technological development".[13] Douthat sees the West in the 21st century in an "age of decadence", marked by stalemate and stagnation. He is the author of the book The Decadent Society, published by Simon & Schuster in 2020. According to the news website Vox, "Douthat’s definition of a 'decadent society' is that we’re trapped in a stale system that keeps spinning in place, reproducing the same arguments and frustrations over and over again."[14]

Pria Viswalingam

Pria Viswalingam, an Australian documentary and film maker, sees the western world in decay since the late 1960s. Viswalingam is the author of the six-episode documentary TV series Decadence: The Meaninglessness of Modern Life, broadcast in 2006 and 2007, and the 2011 documentary film Decadence: The Decline of the Western World.

According to Viswalingam, western culture started in 1215 with the Magna Carta, continued to the Renaissance, the Reformation, the founding of America, the Enlightenment and culminated with the social revolutions of the 1960s.[15]

Since 1969, the year of the moon landing, the My Lai massacre, the Woodstock Festival and the Altamont Free Concert, "decadence depicts the west's decline". As symptoms he names increasing suicide rates, addiction to anti-depressants, exaggerated individualism, broken families and a loss of religious faith as well as "treadmill consumption, growing income-disparity, b-grade leadership", and money as the only benchmark for value.

Use in Marxism

Leninism

According to Vladimir Lenin, capitalism had reached its highest stage and could no longer provide for the general development of society. He expected reduced vigor in economic activity and a growth in unhealthy economic phenomena, reflecting capitalism's gradually decreasing capacity to provide for social needs and preparing the ground for socialist revolution in the West. Politically, World War I proved the decadent nature of the advanced capitalist countries to Lenin, that capitalism had reached the stage where it would destroy its own prior achievements more than it would advance.[16]

One who directly opposed the idea of decadence as expressed by Lenin was José Ortega y Gasset in The Revolt of the Masses (1930). He argued that the "mass man" had the notion of material progress and scientific advance deeply inculcated to the extent that it was an expectation. He also argued that contemporary progress was opposite the true decadence of the Roman Empire.[17]

Left communism

Decadence is an important aspect of contemporary left communist theory. Similar to Lenin's use of it, left communists, coming from the Communist International themselves started in fact with a theory of decadence in the first place, yet the communist left sees the theory of decadence at the heart of Marx's method as well, expressed in famous works such as The Communist Manifesto, Grundrisse, Das Kapital but most significantly in Preface to the Critique of Political Economy.[18]

Contemporary left communist theory defends that Lenin was mistaken on his definition of imperialism (although how grave his mistake was and how much of his work on imperialism is valid varies from groups to groups) and Rosa Luxemburg to be basically correct on this question, thus accepting capitalism as a world epoch similarly to Lenin, but a world epoch from which no capitalist state can oppose or avoid being a part of. On the other hand, the theoretical framework of capitalism's decadence varies between different groups while left communist organizations like the International Communist Current hold a basically Luxemburgist analysis that makes an emphasis on the world market and its expansion, others hold views more in line with those of Vladimir Lenin, Nikolai Bukharin and most importantly Henryk Grossman and Paul Mattick with an emphasis on monopolies and the falling rate of profit.

See also

References

  1. ^ The Oxford Dictionary of American Political Slang edited by Grant Barrett, p. 90.
  2. ^ a b Etchells, Pete (January 16, 2015). "Declinism: is the world actually getting worse?". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 December 2016.
  3. ^ Steven R. Quartz, The State Of The World Isn't Nearly As Bad As You Think, Edge Foundation, Inc., retrieved 2016-02-17
  4. ^ a b Lewis, Jemima (January 16, 2016). "Why we yearn for the good old days". The Telegraph. Retrieved 20 December 2016.
  5. ^ Gopnik, Adam (September 12, 2011). "Decline, Fall, Rinse, Repeat". The New Yorker. Retrieved 20 December 2016.
  6. ^ Hurst, Isobel (2019-08-22), Desmarais, Jane H.; Weir, David (eds.), "Nineteenth-Century Literary and Artistic Responses to Roman Decadence", Decadence and Literature, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 47–65, ISBN 978-1-108-42624-4, retrieved 2021-07-24
  7. ^ Hoffleit, Gerald (2014), Landgraf, Diemo (ed.), "Progress and Decadence—Poststructuralism as Progressivism", Decadence in Literature and Intellectual Debate since 1945, New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, pp. 67–81, doi:10.1057/9781137431028_4, ISBN 978-1-137-43102-8, retrieved 2021-07-24
  8. ^ Geoffrey Farrington (1994). The Dedalus Book of Roman Decadence: Emperors of Debauchery. Dedalus. ISBN 978-1-873982-16-7.
  9. ^ Patrick M. House (1996). The Psychology of Decadence: The Portrayal of Ancient Romans in Selected Works of Russian Literature of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. University of Wisconsin--Madison.
  10. ^ Toner, Jerry (2019), Weir, David; Desmarais, Jane (eds.), "Decadence in Ancient Rome", Decadence and Literature, Cambridge Critical Concepts, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 15–29, ISBN 978-1-108-42624-4, retrieved 2021-07-24
  11. ^ Kirkus UK review of Laqueur, Walter Weimar: A cultural history, 1918-1933
  12. ^ Barzun, Jacques: From Dawn to Decadence: 500 Years of Western Cultural Life. HarperCollins, New York 2000.
  13. ^ Douthat, Ross (February 7, 2020). "The Age of Decadence". New York Times. Retrieved 2021-02-10.
  14. ^ Illing, Sean (February 28, 2020). "The case that America's in decline". www.vox.com. Retrieved 2021-02-10.
  15. ^ Molitorisz, Sacha (December 2, 2011). "Society is past its use by date". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
  16. ^ Decadence: The Theory of Decline or the Decline of Theory? (Part I). Aufheben. Summer 1993.
  17. ^ Mora, José Ferrater (1956). Ortega y Gasset: an outline of his philosophy. Bowes & Bowes. p. 18.
  18. ^ Marx, Karl (1859). A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy. Progress Publishers.

Further reading

External links

  • Collection of the articles of the International Communist Current on the Theory of Decadence
  • Decadence, symbolist, and the fin de siècle: a notebook

decadence, other, uses, disambiguation, word, decadence, which, first, meant, simply, decline, abstract, sense, most, often, used, refer, perceived, decay, standards, morals, dignity, religious, faith, honour, discipline, skill, governing, among, members, elit. For other uses see Decadence disambiguation The word decadence which at first meant simply decline in an abstract sense is now most often used to refer to a perceived decay in standards morals dignity religious faith honour discipline or skill at governing among the members of the elite of a very large social structure such as an empire or nation state By extension it may refer to a decline in art literature science technology and work ethics or very loosely to self indulgent behavior An orgy in Imperial Rome by Henryk Siemiradzki Romans during the Decadence by Thomas Couture Usage of the term sometimes implies moral censure or an acceptance of the idea met with throughout the world since ancient times that such declines are objectively observable and that they inevitably precede the destruction of the society in question for this reason modern historians use it with caution The word originated in Medieval Latin decadentia appeared in 16th century French and entered English soon afterwards It bore the neutral meaning of decay decrease or decline until the late 19th century when the influence of new theories of social degeneration contributed to its modern meaning The idea that a society or institution is declining is called declinism This is the predisposition caused by cognitive biases such as rosy retrospection to view the past more favourably and future more negatively 1 2 3 Declinism has been described as a trick of the mind and as an emotional strategy something comforting to snuggle up to when the present day seems intolerably bleak 4 Other factors contributing to declinism include the reminiscence bump as well as both the positivity effect and negativity bias 2 4 5 In literature the Decadent movement late nineteenth century fin de siecle writers who were associated with Symbolism or the Aesthetic movement was first given its name by hostile critics Later it was triumphantly adopted by some of the writers themselves The Decadents praised artifice over nature and sophistication over simplicity defying contemporary discourses of decline by embracing subjects and styles that their critics considered morbid and over refined Some of these writers were influenced by the tradition of the Gothic novel and by the poetry and fiction of Edgar Allan Poe Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient Rome 1 2 Decadent movement 1 3 1920s Berlin 1 4 21st century 1 4 1 Jacques Barzun 1 4 2 Pria Viswalingam 2 Use in Marxism 2 1 Leninism 2 2 Left communism 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory EditAncient Rome Edit Main article Roman decadence Decadence is a popular criticism of the culture of the later Roman Empire s elites seen also in much of its earlier historiography and 19th and early 20th century art depicting Roman life This criticism describes the later Roman Empire as reveling in luxury in its extreme characterized by corrupting extravagance weakness and sexual deviance as well as orgies and sensual excesses 6 7 8 9 10 Decadent movement Edit Main article Decadent movement Pornocrates by Felicien Rops 1878 Decadence was the name given to a number of late nineteenth century writers who valued artifice over the earlier Romantics naive view of nature Some of them triumphantly adopted the name referring to themselves as Decadents For the most part they were influenced by the tradition of the Gothic novel and by the poetry and fiction of Edgar Allan Poe and were associated with Symbolism and or Aestheticism This concept of decadence dates from the eighteenth century especially from Montesquieu and was taken up by critics as a term of abuse after Desire Nisard used it against Victor Hugo and Romanticism in general A later generation of Romantics such as Theophile Gautier and Charles Baudelaire took the word as a badge of pride as a sign of their rejection of what they saw as banal progress In the 1880s a group of French writers referred to themselves as Decadents The classic novel from this group is Joris Karl Huysmans Against Nature often seen as the first great decadent work though others attribute this honor to Baudelaire s works In Britain and Ireland the leading figure associated with the Decadent movement was Irish writer Oscar Wilde Other significant figures include Arthur Symons Aubrey Beardsley and Ernest Dowson The Symbolist movement has frequently been confused with the Decadent movement Several young writers were derisively referred to in the press as decadent in the mid 1880s Jean Moreas manifesto was largely a response to this polemic A few of these writers embraced the term while most avoided it Although the aesthetics of Symbolism and Decadence can be seen as overlapping in some areas the two remain distinct 1920s Berlin Edit Main article 1920s Berlin See also Roaring twenties and Weimar culture This fertile culture of Berlin extended onwards until Adolf Hitler rose to power in early 1933 and stamped out any and all resistance to the Nazi Party Likewise the German far right decried Berlin as a haven of vice clarification needed A new culture had developed in and around Berlin throughout the previous decade including architecture and design Bauhaus 1919 33 a variety of literature Doblin Berlin Alexanderplatz 1929 film Lang Metropolis 1927 Dietrich Der blaue Engel 1930 painting Grosz and music Brecht and Weill The Threepenny Opera 1928 criticism Benjamin philosophy psychology Jung and fashion citation needed This culture was considered decadent and disruptive by rightists 11 Film was making huge technical and artistic strides during this period of time in Berlin and gave rise to the influential movement called German Expressionism Talkies the Sound films were also becoming more popular with the general public across Europe and Berlin was producing very many of them Berlin in the 1920s also proved to be a haven for English language writers such as W H Auden Stephen Spender and Christopher Isherwood who wrote a series of Berlin novels inspiring the play I Am a Camera which was later adapted into a musical Cabaret and an Academy Award winning film of the same name Spender s semi autobiographical novel The Temple evokes the attitude and atmosphere of the place at the time 21st century Edit Jacques Barzun Edit Jacques Barzun author of From Dawn to Decadence The historian Jacques Barzun 1907 2012 gives a definition of decadence which is independent from moral judgement In his bestseller From Dawn to Decadence 500 Years of Western Cultural Life 12 published 2000 he describes decadent eras as times when the forms of art as of life seem exhausted the stages of development have been run through Institutions function painfully He emphasizes that decadent in his view is not a slur but a technical label With reference to Barzun New York Times columnist Ross Douthat characterises decadence as a state of economic stagnation institutional decay and cultural and intellectual exhaustion at a high level of material prosperity and technological development 13 Douthat sees the West in the 21st century in an age of decadence marked by stalemate and stagnation He is the author of the book The Decadent Society published by Simon amp Schuster in 2020 According to the news website Vox Douthat s definition of a decadent society is that we re trapped in a stale system that keeps spinning in place reproducing the same arguments and frustrations over and over again 14 Pria Viswalingam Edit Pria Viswalingam an Australian documentary and film maker sees the western world in decay since the late 1960s Viswalingam is the author of the six episode documentary TV series Decadence The Meaninglessness of Modern Life broadcast in 2006 and 2007 and the 2011 documentary film Decadence The Decline of the Western World According to Viswalingam western culture started in 1215 with the Magna Carta continued to the Renaissance the Reformation the founding of America the Enlightenment and culminated with the social revolutions of the 1960s 15 Since 1969 the year of the moon landing the My Lai massacre the Woodstock Festival and the Altamont Free Concert decadence depicts the west s decline As symptoms he names increasing suicide rates addiction to anti depressants exaggerated individualism broken families and a loss of religious faith as well as treadmill consumption growing income disparity b grade leadership and money as the only benchmark for value Use in Marxism EditLeninism Edit According to Vladimir Lenin capitalism had reached its highest stage and could no longer provide for the general development of society He expected reduced vigor in economic activity and a growth in unhealthy economic phenomena reflecting capitalism s gradually decreasing capacity to provide for social needs and preparing the ground for socialist revolution in the West Politically World War I proved the decadent nature of the advanced capitalist countries to Lenin that capitalism had reached the stage where it would destroy its own prior achievements more than it would advance 16 One who directly opposed the idea of decadence as expressed by Lenin was Jose Ortega y Gasset in The Revolt of the Masses 1930 He argued that the mass man had the notion of material progress and scientific advance deeply inculcated to the extent that it was an expectation He also argued that contemporary progress was opposite the true decadence of the Roman Empire 17 Left communism Edit Decadence is an important aspect of contemporary left communist theory Similar to Lenin s use of it left communists coming from the Communist International themselves started in fact with a theory of decadence in the first place yet the communist left sees the theory of decadence at the heart of Marx s method as well expressed in famous works such as The Communist Manifesto Grundrisse Das Kapital but most significantly in Preface to the Critique of Political Economy 18 Contemporary left communist theory defends that Lenin was mistaken on his definition of imperialism although how grave his mistake was and how much of his work on imperialism is valid varies from groups to groups and Rosa Luxemburg to be basically correct on this question thus accepting capitalism as a world epoch similarly to Lenin but a world epoch from which no capitalist state can oppose or avoid being a part of On the other hand the theoretical framework of capitalism s decadence varies between different groups while left communist organizations like the International Communist Current hold a basically Luxemburgist analysis that makes an emphasis on the world market and its expansion others hold views more in line with those of Vladimir Lenin Nikolai Bukharin and most importantly Henryk Grossman and Paul Mattick with an emphasis on monopolies and the falling rate of profit See also EditAcedia Anomie Bread and circuses Buraiha Competence human resources Kleptocracy Late capitalism Moral relativism Societal collapse Twilight of the IdolsReferences Edit The Oxford Dictionary of American Political Slang edited by Grant Barrett p 90 a b Etchells Pete January 16 2015 Declinism is the world actually getting worse The Guardian Retrieved 20 December 2016 Steven R Quartz The State Of The World Isn t Nearly As Bad As You Think Edge Foundation Inc retrieved 2016 02 17 a b Lewis Jemima January 16 2016 Why we yearn for the good old days The Telegraph Retrieved 20 December 2016 Gopnik Adam September 12 2011 Decline Fall Rinse Repeat The New Yorker Retrieved 20 December 2016 Hurst Isobel 2019 08 22 Desmarais Jane H Weir David eds Nineteenth Century Literary and Artistic Responses to Roman Decadence Decadence and Literature Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 47 65 ISBN 978 1 108 42624 4 retrieved 2021 07 24 Hoffleit Gerald 2014 Landgraf Diemo ed Progress and Decadence Poststructuralism as Progressivism Decadence in Literature and Intellectual Debate since 1945 New York Palgrave Macmillan US pp 67 81 doi 10 1057 9781137431028 4 ISBN 978 1 137 43102 8 retrieved 2021 07 24 Geoffrey Farrington 1994 The Dedalus Book of Roman Decadence Emperors of Debauchery Dedalus ISBN 978 1 873982 16 7 Patrick M House 1996 The Psychology of Decadence The Portrayal of Ancient Romans in Selected Works of Russian Literature of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries University of Wisconsin Madison Toner Jerry 2019 Weir David Desmarais Jane eds Decadence in Ancient Rome Decadence and Literature Cambridge Critical Concepts Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 15 29 ISBN 978 1 108 42624 4 retrieved 2021 07 24 Kirkus UK review of Laqueur Walter Weimar A cultural history 1918 1933 Barzun Jacques From Dawn to Decadence 500 Years of Western Cultural Life HarperCollins New York 2000 Douthat Ross February 7 2020 The Age of Decadence New York Times Retrieved 2021 02 10 Illing Sean February 28 2020 The case that America s in decline www vox com Retrieved 2021 02 10 Molitorisz Sacha December 2 2011 Society is past its use by date Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 2021 05 07 Decadence The Theory of Decline or the Decline of Theory Part I Aufheben Summer 1993 Mora Jose Ferrater 1956 Ortega y Gasset an outline of his philosophy Bowes amp Bowes p 18 Marx Karl 1859 A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy Progress Publishers Further reading EditRichard Gilman Decadence The Strange Life of an Epithet 1979 ISBN 0 374 13567 3 Matei Calinescu Five Faces of Modernity ISBN 0 8223 0767 7 Mario Praz The Romantic Agony 1930 ISBN 0 19 281061 8 Jacques Barzun From Dawn to Decadence 2000 ISBN 0 06 017586 9 A E Carter The Idea of Decadence in French Literature 1978 ISBN 0 8020 7078 7 Michael Murray Jacques Barzun Portrait of a Mind 2011 ISBN 978 1 929490 41 7External links Edit Look up decadence in Wiktionary the free dictionary Collection of the articles of the International Communist Current on the Theory of Decadence Chronology of Decadence Decadence symbolist and the fin de siecle a notebook Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Decadence amp oldid 1147808963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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