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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars overdue survey of intellectual history
Books like these are hard to find. Everdell has attempted something ambitious and difficult: to situate some of the most influential and fascinating cultural figures of modernism in vivid historical context. The result is a rich tapestry whose warp and woof includes innovators from both the arts and sciences. A book which treated only one or the other would have been...
Published on May 13, 2003 by btrixter

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15 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Competent but lacks punch
Everdell does a competent job of arranging what is essentially a series of essays on a variety of Modernist thinkers. Unfortunately, I believe his book is too specific for the general reader and does too little with covered ground to interest the scholar. By focusing on the person rather than the subject, the book fails to say much when taken as a whole. Everdell gets...
Published on June 24, 1999


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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars overdue survey of intellectual history, May 13, 2003
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btrixter (Athens Greece) - See all my reviews
Books like these are hard to find. Everdell has attempted something ambitious and difficult: to situate some of the most influential and fascinating cultural figures of modernism in vivid historical context. The result is a rich tapestry whose warp and woof includes innovators from both the arts and sciences. A book which treated only one or the other would have been interesting in its own right, but Everdell went for broke by insisting that the modernist climate is best understood by showing the wide-spread cultural cross-pollination characteristic of the time.

This book is one of the few gems of intellectual history that tries and succeeds in recreating the cultural atmosphere at the turn of the century. Some vignettes here are naturally better than others (the chapter on Strindberg is not to be missed!), but the thesis that ties them all together is strong and sound, so the book works as a brilliant study of the modernist impulse.

At a time when boundaries between academic disciplines are starting to give way to new and exciting discourses, Everdell's book proves to be a timely contribution to this budding trend.

Everdell loves what he studies and it shows.

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14 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book for our time--excellent., October 1, 1998
By A Customer
In a time of vulgar relativism and particularism,in which "postmodernist" ideas increasingly influence not only intellectual but also popular culture, Everdell brings us back to a consideration of the period to which postmodernism putatively reacts -- i.e., modernism. Much, of course, has been written about modernism, but Everdell's ideas are much more comprehensive and solidly argued than almost any others I have read. Intellectual history is a daring (and sometimes dangerous) enterprise, but one that is critical for understanding what we think and why. Everdell's book is a model of the genre -- learned, thoughtful, innovative, witty, and clear.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A comprehensive accomplishment, October 14, 2002
By A Customer
As a "general reader" I have to take issue with the reviewer from Cambridge. The advantage of a book is that, where discussion gets too particular or specialized, one may content oneself with the general idea--in this case, without penalty. Everdell's grasp of fields as diverse as mathematics and painting may try the expertise of all but a few specialists, but his unifying theses will not. And this is more than a work of "intellectual" history: the author deals with the practices and discoveries of various forms or art and science and avoids the trap of their a priori reduction to intellectual principles.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The triumph of lucidity, September 12, 2009
Just like the individual components of Modernism, being inventions of the intellect, the term Moderism is also an invention of the mind, or just plain "mind" as brain writers term it (presumably because you can't isolate of define where "the" mind is).
But it's an interesting idea from a historical perspective to notice that abstract thinking including gedanken or thought experiments became more prevalent and resulted in new and useable theories; near the end of the 19th century.
If you type in "Modernism" in the search box at Amazon.com, you get hundreds of books on it, most of which read like doctoral dissertations written in academic speak. What's good about this book is the lucidity of it. I was also impressed at the authors wide scope of knowledge across disciplines; better than mine. I still don't know what a flatted fifth is.
Good work.
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9 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A stunning accomplishment, August 31, 2003
By A Customer
In an age when professional historians write only "micro-history," and when it is considered in bad-taste to find large themes in history, Everdell's great synthetic work is bracingly bold, ambitious and brilliant. Canvassing the first years of the twentieth century, he finds surprising connections between new, modernist mathematics, science, music, art and philosophy. I didn't always agree with his interpretation, but the book challenged and cajolled me, and now, two years after I first read it, I doubt that a week goes by when I don't find myself thinking about it, disputing it in my mind, often consulting it. This is a very, very good book: Everdell should be thanked for his wisdom and -- odd as this may sound -- for his courage.
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15 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Competent but lacks punch, June 24, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The First Moderns: Profiles in the Origins of Twentieth-Century Thought (Hardcover)
Everdell does a competent job of arranging what is essentially a series of essays on a variety of Modernist thinkers. Unfortunately, I believe his book is too specific for the general reader and does too little with covered ground to interest the scholar. By focusing on the person rather than the subject, the book fails to say much when taken as a whole. Everdell gets bogged in the minutia of each thinkers' work without really exploring the connections between them and this prevents him from breaking new ground on the broader historical understanding of Modernism. In the end, a lamentable flaw but not a fatal one and for the reader somewhere between generalist and scholar, this book should offer something of interest.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Too many anecdotes, not enough insight, May 5, 2009
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This book prefers telling all the anecdotes to the telling anecdote. More space explicating important ideas and much less to painting a broad canvas that gets in as many names as possible would have been helpful.
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The First Moderns: Profiles in the Origins of Twentieth-Century Thought
The First Moderns: Profiles in the Origins of Twentieth-Century Thought by William R. Everdell (Hardcover - May 15, 1997)
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