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Mon, 10 Sep 2001 17:17:17 +0200 |
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the german expression for contemporary ("zeitgenoessisch" with an Umlaut) is real undiluted 18th century -- mostly for people but also for poetry etc. (Goethe, Lessing, etc.). It has a beautiful oldfashioned flair but is still going strong (which means that it is very useful and
cannot be replaced easily).
When is/was "today"?.
Christof Wolters
T W Moran schrieb:
> Good Morning,
> I'm probably going to get flamed good for this but you've stepped on a
> pet peeve.
> Modern and contemporary were not classifications until we had to many
> Ph.D.s' with the need to have something to say.
> Artists have always copied what went before them or went off in some
> new direction. When that new direction worked it survived and we had a
> new modern development.
> We do not find commentary breaking down segments of the past by name,
> save for the past and the present until our own times.
> I understand academia's need to validate it's self, and the current
> desire to pigeon hole knowledge.
> The effect of this pigeon holing is to put walls between people. In
> that it becomes impolite to cross into someone else's aria of expertise,
> with out the proper papers upon the wall.
> It is often taken by those with papers that those who are with out
> papers can not have any understanding of the subject.
> This is not to say that we have not reached a point in history where
> giving eras of development or predominate style some title, e.g. Art
> nouveau, is not useful. But any such effort should be a help not a
> hindrance.
> For after all, is not all this effort for the enlighting of every one?
> I will go and hide in my bomb shelter now.
> Sincerely yours
> Tw
>
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