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Fin de siècle

Fin de siècle (French: [fɛ̃ də sjɛkl]) is a French term meaning "end of century,” a phrase which typically encompasses both the meaning of the similar English idiom "turn of the century" and also makes reference to the closing of one era and onset of another. Without context, the term is typically used to refer to the end of the 19th century. This period was widely thought to be a period of social degeneracy, but at the same time a period of hope for a new beginning.[1] The "spirit" of fin de siècle often refers to the cultural hallmarks that were recognized as prominent in the 1880s and 1890s, including ennui, cynicism, pessimism, and "a widespread belief that civilization leads to decadence.”[2][3]

The term fin de siècle is commonly applied to French art and artists, as the traits of the culture first appeared there, but the movement affected many European countries.[4][5] The term becomes applicable to the sentiments and traits associated with the culture, as opposed to focusing solely on the movement's initial recognition in France. The ideas and concerns developed by fin de siècle artists provided the impetus for movements such as symbolism and modernism.[6]

The themes of fin de siècle political culture were very controversial and have been cited as a major influence on fascism[7][8] and as a generator of the science of geopolitics, including the theory of Lebensraum.[9] Professor of Historical Geography at the University of Nottingham, Michael Heffernan, and Mackubin Thomas Owens wrote about the origins of geopolitics:

The idea that this project required a new name in 1899 reflected a widespread belief that the changes taking place in the global economic and political system were seismically important.

The "new world of the Twentieth century would need to be understood in its entirety, as an integrated global whole". Technology and global communication made the world "smaller" and turned it into a single system; the time was characterized by pan-ideas and a utopian "one-worldism," proceeding further than pan-ideas.[10][11]

What we now think of geopolitics had its origins in fin de siècle Europe in response to technological change ... and the creation of a "closed political system" as European imperialist competition extinguished the world's "frontiers".[12]

The major political theme of the era was that of revolt against materialism, rationalism, positivism, bourgeois society, and liberal democracy.[7] The fin-de-siècle generation supported emotionalism, irrationalism, subjectivism, and vitalism,[8] while the mindset of the age saw civilization as being in a crisis that required a massive and total solution.[7]

Fin-de-siècle syndrome

Michael Heffernan in his article "Fin de Siècle, Fin du Monde?" [End of the century, end of the world?] (2000) finds in the Christian world what he calls "the syndrome of fin de siècle". In 2000, this took the form of the Year 2000 problem. Fins de siècle are accompanied by future expectations:

Changes which are actually taking place at these junctures tend to acquire extra (sometimes mystical) layers of meaning. This was certainly the case in the 1890s, a decade of "semiotic arousal" when everything, it seemed, was a sign, a harbinger of some future radical disjuncture or cataclysmic upheaval ... The original French expression, meaning simply "end of century", became a catch all phrase to describe everything from the architectural and artistic styles ... to the wider, often impassioned debates about the past, the present and the future on the eve of a new century. ... Much fin-de-siècle writing ... tended to assume that the passing of the nineteenth century would represent a fundamental historical discontinuity, a clear break with the past.[10]

Degeneration theory

 
Arthur Schopenhauer, German philosopher, whose philosophy influenced the culture of fin de siècle.
 
The Belgian symbolist Fernand Khnopff's The Caress

B. A. Morel's degeneration theory holds that although societies can progress, they can also remain static or even regress if influenced by a flawed environment, such as national conditions or outside cultural influences.[13] This degeneration can be passed from generation to generation, resulting in imbecility and senility due to hereditary influence. Max Nordau's Degeneration holds that the two dominant traits of those degenerated in a society involve ego mania and mysticism.[13] The former term was understood to mean a pathological degree of self-absorption and unreasonable attention to one's own sentiments and activities, as can be seen in the extremely descriptive nature of minute details; the latter referred to the impaired ability to translate primary perceptions into fully developed ideas, largely noted in symbolist works.[14] Nordau's treatment of these traits as degenerative qualities lends to the perception of a world falling into decay through fin de siècle corruptions of thought, and influencing the pessimism growing in Europe's philosophical consciousness.[13] As fin de siècle citizens, attitudes tended toward science in an attempt to decipher the world in which they lived. The focus on psycho-physiology, now psychology, was a large part of fin de siècle society[15] in that it studied a topic that could not be depicted through Romanticism, but relied on traits exhibited to suggest how the mind works, as does symbolism. The concept of genius returned to popular consciousness around this period through Max Nordau's work with degeneration, prompting study of artists supposedly affected by social degeneration and what separates imbecility from genius. The genius and the imbecile were determined to have largely similar character traits, including les delires des grandeurs and la folie du doute.[13] The first, which means delusions of grandeur, begins with a disproportionate sense of importance in one's own activities and results in a sense of alienation,[16] as Nordau describes in Baudelaire, as well as the second characteristic of madness of doubt, which involves intense indecision and extreme preoccupation with minute detail.[13] The difference between degenerate genius and degenerate madman become the extensive knowledge held by the genius in a few areas paired with a belief in one's own superiority as a result. Together, these psychological traits lend to originality, eccentricity, and a sense of alienation, all symptoms of le mal du siècle (the evil of the century) that impacted French youth at the beginning of the 19th century until expanding outward and eventually influencing the rest of Europe approaching the turn of the century.[16][17]

Pessimism

 
Irish Aesthetic writer Oscar Wilde

England's ideological space was affected by the philosophical waves of pessimism sweeping Europe, starting with philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer's work from before 1860 and gradually influencing artists internationally.[17] R. H. Goodale identified 235 essays by British and American authors concerning pessimism, ranging from 1871 to 1900, showing the prominence of pessimism in conjunction with English ideology.[17] Further, Oscar Wilde's references to pessimism in his works demonstrate the relevance of the ideology on the English. In An Ideal Husband, Wilde's protagonist asks another character whether "at heart, [she is] an optimist or a pessimist? Those seem to be the only two fashionable religions left to us nowadays."[17] Wilde's reflection on personal philosophy as more culturally significant than religion lends credence to degeneration theory, as applied to Baudelaire's influence on other nations.[13] However, the optimistic Romanticism popular earlier in the century would also have affected the shifting ideological landscape. The newly fashionable pessimism appears again in Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, written that same year:

Algernon: I hope tomorrow will be a fine day, Lane.
Lane: It never is, sir.
Algernon: Lane, you're a perfect pessimist.
Lane: I do my best to give satisfaction, sir.

Lane is philosophically current as of 1895, reining in his master's optimism about the weather by reminding Algernon of how the world typically operates. His pessimism gives satisfaction to Algernon; the perfect servant of a gentleman is one who is philosophically aware.[17] Charles Baudelaire's work demonstrates some of the pessimism expected of the time, and his work with modernity exemplified the decadence and decay with which turn-of-the-century French art is associated, while his work with symbolism promoted the mysticism Nordau associated with fin de siècle artists. Baudelaire's pioneering translations of Edgar Allan Poe's verse supports the aesthetic role of translation in fin de siècle culture,[18] while his own works influenced French and English artists through the use of modernity and symbolism. Baudelaire, Rimbaud, and their contemporaries became known as French decadents, a group that influenced its English counterpart, the aesthetes like Oscar Wilde. Both groups believed the purpose of art was to evoke an emotional response and demonstrate the beauty inherent in the unnatural as opposed to trying to teach its audience an infallible sense of morality.[19]

Literary conventions

In the Victorian fin de siècle, the themes of degeneration and anxiety are expressed not only through the physical landscape which provided a backdrop for Gothic Literature, but also through the human body itself. Works such as Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886), Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891), Arthur Machen's The Great God Pan (1894), H. G. Wells' The Time Machine (1895), and Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) all explore themes of change, development, evolution, mutation, corruption and decay in relation to the human body and mind. These literary conventions were a direct reflection of many evolutionary, scientific, social and medical theories and advancements that emerged toward the end of the 19th century.[20]

Artistic conventions

 
At the Moulin Rouge (1895), a painting by Henri Toulouse-Lautrec that captures the vibrant and decadent spirit of society during the fin de siècle

The works of the Decadents and the Aesthetes contain the hallmarks typical of fin de siècle art. Holbrook Jackson's The Eighteen Nineties describes the characteristics of English decadence, which are: perversity, artificiality, egoism, and curiosity.[14] The first trait is the concern for the perverse, unclean, and unnatural.[13] Romanticism encouraged audiences to view physical traits as indicative of one's inner self, whereas the fin de siècle artists accepted beauty as the basis of life, and so valued that which was not conventionally beautiful.[14]

 
The Scream (1893), an expressionist painting by Edvard Munch, is a prominent cultural symbol of the fin de siècle era.[21]

This belief in beauty in the abject leads to the obsession with artifice and symbolism, as artists rejected ineffable ideas of beauty in favour of the abstract.[14] Through symbolism, aesthetes could evoke sentiments and ideas in their audience without relying on an infallible general understanding of the world.[16]

The third trait of the culture is egoism, a term similar to that of "egomania", meaning disproportionate attention placed on one's own endeavours. This can result in a type of alienation and anguish, as in Baudelaire's case, and demonstrates how aesthetic artists chose cityscapes over country as a result of their aversion to the natural.[13]

Finally, curiosity is identifiable through diabolism and the exploration of the evil or immoral, focusing on the morbid and macabre, but without imposing any moral lessons on the audience.[14][19]

See also

References

  1. ^ Schaffer, Talia. Literature and Culture at the Fin de Siècle. New York: Longman, 2007. 3.
  2. ^ Meštrović, Stjepan G. The Coming Fin de Siecle: An Application of Durkheim's Sociology to modernity and postmodernism. Oxford; New York: Routledge (1992 [1991]: 2).
  3. ^ Pireddu, Nicoletta. "Primitive marks of modernity: cultural reconfigurations in the Franco-Italian fin de siècle". Romanic Review 97 (3–4), 2006: 371–400.
  4. ^ McGuinness, Patrick (ed.) Symbolism, Decadence and the Fin de Siècle: French and European Perspectives. Exeter University Press, 2000: 9.
  5. ^ Pireddu, Nicoletta. Antropologi alla corte della bellezza. Decadenza ed economia simbolica nell'Europa fin de siècle. Verona: Fiorini, 2002.
  6. ^ Has-Ellison, J.Trygve. "Nobles, Modernism, and the Culture of fin-de-siècle Munich". German History 26(1), 2008: 1–23, 2. doi:10.1093/gerhis/ghm001.
  7. ^ a b c Sternhell, Zeev. "Crisis of Fin-de-siècle Thought". International Fascism: Theories, Causes and the New Consensus. London and New York (1998): 169.
  8. ^ a b Payne, Stanley G. A history of fascism, 1914–1945. Oxford: Routledge (1995, 2005): 23–24.
  9. ^ Stephen Kern, Culture of Time and Space, 1880–1918 (Massachusetts & London: Harvard University Press, 1983).
  10. ^ a b Michael Heffernan. "Fin de Siècle, Fin du Monde? On the Origins of European Geopolitics; 1890–1920". Geopolitical Traditions: A Century of Geopolitical Thought (eds.Klaus Dodds, & David A. Atkinson, London & New York: Routledge, 2000), pp. 28, 31.
  11. ^ Michael Heffernan. "The Politics of the Map in the Early Twentieth Century". Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 29/3, (2002): p. 207.
  12. ^ Mackubin Thomas Owens, "In Defense of Classical Geopolitics," Naval War College Review, 50(4), (1999): p. 65. JSTOR 44643038.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Hambrook, Glyn. "Baudelaire, Degeneration Theory, and Literary Criticism". The Modern Language Review. 101.4 (2006): 1005–1024. JSTOR 20467025.
  14. ^ a b c d e Goldfarb, Russel. "Late Victorian Decadence". The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 20.4 (1962): 369–373. JSTOR 427899.
  15. ^ Maxwell, Catherine. "Theodore Watts-Dunton's 'Aylwin (1898)' and the Reduplications of Romanticism". The Yearbook of English Studies 37.1 (2007): 1–21. JSTOR 20479275.
  16. ^ a b c "What Is Fin de Siecle?" The Art Critic 1.1 (1893): 9. JSTOR 20494209.
  17. ^ a b c d e Shrimpton, Nicholas. "'Lane, You're a Perfect Pessimist': Pessimism and the English 'Fin de siècle'". The Yearbook of English Studies 37.1 (2007): 41–57. JSTOR 20479277.
  18. ^ Thain, Marion. "Modernist 'Homage' to the 'Fin de siècle'". The Yearbook of English Studies 37.1 (2007): 22–40. JSTOR 20479276.
  19. ^ a b Quintus, John Allen. "The Moral Implications of Oscar Wilde's Aestheticism". Texas Studies in Literature and Language 22.4 (1980): 559–574. JSTOR 40754628.
  20. ^ Buzwell, Greg (2014). "Gothic fiction in the Victorian fin de siècle: mutating bodies and disturbed minds". The British Library. Retrieved 2016-12-10.
  21. ^ West, Shearer. Fin de Siecle: Art and Society in an Age of Uncertainty. Overlook Press.

Further reading

  • Schwartz, Hillel. Century's End: A Cultural History of the Fin de Siècle—From the 990s Through the 1990s. New York: Doubleday, 1990.
  • La Belle Époque. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1982. ISBN 978-0870993299.

External links

siècle, other, uses, disambiguation, french, sjɛkl, french, term, meaning, century, phrase, which, typically, encompasses, both, meaning, similar, english, idiom, turn, century, also, makes, reference, closing, onset, another, without, context, term, typically. For other uses see Fin de siecle disambiguation Fin de siecle French fɛ de sjɛkl is a French term meaning end of century a phrase which typically encompasses both the meaning of the similar English idiom turn of the century and also makes reference to the closing of one era and onset of another Without context the term is typically used to refer to the end of the 19th century This period was widely thought to be a period of social degeneracy but at the same time a period of hope for a new beginning 1 The spirit of fin de siecle often refers to the cultural hallmarks that were recognized as prominent in the 1880s and 1890s including ennui cynicism pessimism and a widespread belief that civilization leads to decadence 2 3 The term fin de siecle is commonly applied to French art and artists as the traits of the culture first appeared there but the movement affected many European countries 4 5 The term becomes applicable to the sentiments and traits associated with the culture as opposed to focusing solely on the movement s initial recognition in France The ideas and concerns developed by fin de siecle artists provided the impetus for movements such as symbolism and modernism 6 The themes of fin de siecle political culture were very controversial and have been cited as a major influence on fascism 7 8 and as a generator of the science of geopolitics including the theory of Lebensraum 9 Professor of Historical Geography at the University of Nottingham Michael Heffernan and Mackubin Thomas Owens wrote about the origins of geopolitics The idea that this project required a new name in 1899 reflected a widespread belief that the changes taking place in the global economic and political system were seismically important The new world of the Twentieth century would need to be understood in its entirety as an integrated global whole Technology and global communication made the world smaller and turned it into a single system the time was characterized by pan ideas and a utopian one worldism proceeding further than pan ideas 10 11 What we now think of geopolitics had its origins in fin de siecle Europe in response to technological change and the creation of a closed political system as European imperialist competition extinguished the world s frontiers 12 The major political theme of the era was that of revolt against materialism rationalism positivism bourgeois society and liberal democracy 7 The fin de siecle generation supported emotionalism irrationalism subjectivism and vitalism 8 while the mindset of the age saw civilization as being in a crisis that required a massive and total solution 7 Contents 1 Fin de siecle syndrome 2 Degeneration theory 3 Pessimism 4 Literary conventions 5 Artistic conventions 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksFin de siecle syndrome EditSee also Millenarianism Michael Heffernan in his article Fin de Siecle Fin du Monde End of the century end of the world 2000 finds in the Christian world what he calls the syndrome of fin de siecle In 2000 this took the form of the Year 2000 problem Fins de siecle are accompanied by future expectations Changes which are actually taking place at these junctures tend to acquire extra sometimes mystical layers of meaning This was certainly the case in the 1890s a decade of semiotic arousal when everything it seemed was a sign a harbinger of some future radical disjuncture or cataclysmic upheaval The original French expression meaning simply end of century became a catch all phrase to describe everything from the architectural and artistic styles to the wider often impassioned debates about the past the present and the future on the eve of a new century Much fin de siecle writing tended to assume that the passing of the nineteenth century would represent a fundamental historical discontinuity a clear break with the past 10 Degeneration theory Edit Arthur Schopenhauer German philosopher whose philosophy influenced the culture of fin de siecle The Belgian symbolist Fernand Khnopff s The Caress B A Morel s degeneration theory holds that although societies can progress they can also remain static or even regress if influenced by a flawed environment such as national conditions or outside cultural influences 13 This degeneration can be passed from generation to generation resulting in imbecility and senility due to hereditary influence Max Nordau s Degeneration holds that the two dominant traits of those degenerated in a society involve ego mania and mysticism 13 The former term was understood to mean a pathological degree of self absorption and unreasonable attention to one s own sentiments and activities as can be seen in the extremely descriptive nature of minute details the latter referred to the impaired ability to translate primary perceptions into fully developed ideas largely noted in symbolist works 14 Nordau s treatment of these traits as degenerative qualities lends to the perception of a world falling into decay through fin de siecle corruptions of thought and influencing the pessimism growing in Europe s philosophical consciousness 13 As fin de siecle citizens attitudes tended toward science in an attempt to decipher the world in which they lived The focus on psycho physiology now psychology was a large part of fin de siecle society 15 in that it studied a topic that could not be depicted through Romanticism but relied on traits exhibited to suggest how the mind works as does symbolism The concept of genius returned to popular consciousness around this period through Max Nordau s work with degeneration prompting study of artists supposedly affected by social degeneration and what separates imbecility from genius The genius and the imbecile were determined to have largely similar character traits including les delires des grandeurs and la folie du doute 13 The first which means delusions of grandeur begins with a disproportionate sense of importance in one s own activities and results in a sense of alienation 16 as Nordau describes in Baudelaire as well as the second characteristic of madness of doubt which involves intense indecision and extreme preoccupation with minute detail 13 The difference between degenerate genius and degenerate madman become the extensive knowledge held by the genius in a few areas paired with a belief in one s own superiority as a result Together these psychological traits lend to originality eccentricity and a sense of alienation all symptoms of le mal du siecle the evil of the century that impacted French youth at the beginning of the 19th century until expanding outward and eventually influencing the rest of Europe approaching the turn of the century 16 17 Pessimism Edit Irish Aesthetic writer Oscar Wilde England s ideological space was affected by the philosophical waves of pessimism sweeping Europe starting with philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer s work from before 1860 and gradually influencing artists internationally 17 R H Goodale identified 235 essays by British and American authors concerning pessimism ranging from 1871 to 1900 showing the prominence of pessimism in conjunction with English ideology 17 Further Oscar Wilde s references to pessimism in his works demonstrate the relevance of the ideology on the English In An Ideal Husband Wilde s protagonist asks another character whether at heart she is an optimist or a pessimist Those seem to be the only two fashionable religions left to us nowadays 17 Wilde s reflection on personal philosophy as more culturally significant than religion lends credence to degeneration theory as applied to Baudelaire s influence on other nations 13 However the optimistic Romanticism popular earlier in the century would also have affected the shifting ideological landscape The newly fashionable pessimism appears again in Wilde s The Importance of Being Earnest written that same year Algernon I hope tomorrow will be a fine day Lane Lane It never is sir Algernon Lane you re a perfect pessimist Lane I do my best to give satisfaction sir Lane is philosophically current as of 1895 reining in his master s optimism about the weather by reminding Algernon of how the world typically operates His pessimism gives satisfaction to Algernon the perfect servant of a gentleman is one who is philosophically aware 17 Charles Baudelaire s work demonstrates some of the pessimism expected of the time and his work with modernity exemplified the decadence and decay with which turn of the century French art is associated while his work with symbolism promoted the mysticism Nordau associated with fin de siecle artists Baudelaire s pioneering translations of Edgar Allan Poe s verse supports the aesthetic role of translation in fin de siecle culture 18 while his own works influenced French and English artists through the use of modernity and symbolism Baudelaire Rimbaud and their contemporaries became known as French decadents a group that influenced its English counterpart the aesthetes like Oscar Wilde Both groups believed the purpose of art was to evoke an emotional response and demonstrate the beauty inherent in the unnatural as opposed to trying to teach its audience an infallible sense of morality 19 Literary conventions EditIn the Victorian fin de siecle the themes of degeneration and anxiety are expressed not only through the physical landscape which provided a backdrop for Gothic Literature but also through the human body itself Works such as Robert Louis Stevenson s The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1886 Oscar Wilde s The Picture of Dorian Gray 1891 Arthur Machen s The Great God Pan 1894 H G Wells The Time Machine 1895 and Bram Stoker s Dracula 1897 all explore themes of change development evolution mutation corruption and decay in relation to the human body and mind These literary conventions were a direct reflection of many evolutionary scientific social and medical theories and advancements that emerged toward the end of the 19th century 20 Artistic conventions Edit At the Moulin Rouge 1895 a painting by Henri Toulouse Lautrec that captures the vibrant and decadent spirit of society during the fin de siecle The works of the Decadents and the Aesthetes contain the hallmarks typical of fin de siecle art Holbrook Jackson s The Eighteen Nineties describes the characteristics of English decadence which are perversity artificiality egoism and curiosity 14 The first trait is the concern for the perverse unclean and unnatural 13 Romanticism encouraged audiences to view physical traits as indicative of one s inner self whereas the fin de siecle artists accepted beauty as the basis of life and so valued that which was not conventionally beautiful 14 The Scream 1893 an expressionist painting by Edvard Munch is a prominent cultural symbol of the fin de siecle era 21 This belief in beauty in the abject leads to the obsession with artifice and symbolism as artists rejected ineffable ideas of beauty in favour of the abstract 14 Through symbolism aesthetes could evoke sentiments and ideas in their audience without relying on an infallible general understanding of the world 16 The third trait of the culture is egoism a term similar to that of egomania meaning disproportionate attention placed on one s own endeavours This can result in a type of alienation and anguish as in Baudelaire s case and demonstrates how aesthetic artists chose cityscapes over country as a result of their aversion to the natural 13 Finally curiosity is identifiable through diabolism and the exploration of the evil or immoral focusing on the morbid and macabre but without imposing any moral lessons on the audience 14 19 See also Edit Victorian era portalBelle Epoque Gay Nineties Futurism Lost generation Symbolism arts Decadent movement Reactionary politicsReferences Edit Schaffer Talia Literature and Culture at the Fin de Siecle New York Longman 2007 3 Mestrovic Stjepan G The Coming Fin de Siecle An Application of Durkheim s Sociology to modernity and postmodernism Oxford New York Routledge 1992 1991 2 Pireddu Nicoletta Primitive marks of modernity cultural reconfigurations in the Franco Italian fin de siecle Romanic Review 97 3 4 2006 371 400 McGuinness Patrick ed Symbolism Decadence and the Fin de Siecle French and European Perspectives Exeter University Press 2000 9 Pireddu Nicoletta Antropologi alla corte della bellezza Decadenza ed economia simbolica nell Europa fin de siecle Verona Fiorini 2002 Has Ellison J Trygve Nobles Modernism and the Culture of fin de siecle Munich German History 26 1 2008 1 23 2 doi 10 1093 gerhis ghm001 a b c Sternhell Zeev Crisis of Fin de siecle Thought International Fascism Theories Causes and the New Consensus London and New York 1998 169 a b Payne Stanley G A history of fascism 1914 1945 Oxford Routledge 1995 2005 23 24 Stephen Kern Culture of Time and Space 1880 1918 Massachusetts amp London Harvard University Press 1983 a b Michael Heffernan Fin de Siecle Fin du Monde On the Origins of European Geopolitics 1890 1920 Geopolitical Traditions A Century of Geopolitical Thought eds Klaus Dodds amp David A Atkinson London amp New York Routledge 2000 pp 28 31 Michael Heffernan The Politics of the Map in the Early Twentieth Century Cartography and Geographic Information Science 29 3 2002 p 207 Mackubin Thomas Owens In Defense of Classical Geopolitics Naval War College Review 50 4 1999 p 65 JSTOR 44643038 a b c d e f g h Hambrook Glyn Baudelaire Degeneration Theory and Literary Criticism The Modern Language Review 101 4 2006 1005 1024 JSTOR 20467025 a b c d e Goldfarb Russel Late Victorian Decadence The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 20 4 1962 369 373 JSTOR 427899 Maxwell Catherine Theodore Watts Dunton s Aylwin 1898 and the Reduplications of Romanticism The Yearbook of English Studies 37 1 2007 1 21 JSTOR 20479275 a b c What Is Fin de Siecle The Art Critic 1 1 1893 9 JSTOR 20494209 a b c d e Shrimpton Nicholas Lane You re a Perfect Pessimist Pessimism and the English Fin de siecle The Yearbook of English Studies 37 1 2007 41 57 JSTOR 20479277 Thain Marion Modernist Homage to the Fin de siecle The Yearbook of English Studies 37 1 2007 22 40 JSTOR 20479276 a b Quintus John Allen The Moral Implications of Oscar Wilde s Aestheticism Texas Studies in Literature and Language 22 4 1980 559 574 JSTOR 40754628 Buzwell Greg 2014 Gothic fiction in the Victorian fin de siecle mutating bodies and disturbed minds The British Library Retrieved 2016 12 10 West Shearer Fin de Siecle Art and Society in an Age of Uncertainty Overlook Press Further reading EditSchwartz Hillel Century s End A Cultural History of the Fin de Siecle From the 990s Through the 1990s New York Doubleday 1990 La Belle Epoque New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1982 ISBN 978 0870993299 External links EditFin de Siecle at The British Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fin de siecle amp oldid 1135158812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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