The Dictionary of Human Geography

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(1) These episodes involved significant
changes in conceptions oftimeandspace
in thewest(Kern, 1983) which also had
dramatic repercussions far beyond the
shores ofeuropeand North America.
Huyssen (2007) insists that modernism
‘cut across’ imperial and post-imperial
cultures – it included Baudelaire’s Paris
and Joyce’s Dublin, but also Borges’
Buenos Aires and Kahlo’s Mexico City –
so that ‘metropolitan culture was trans-
lated, appropriated and creatively mim-
icked in colonized and post-colonial
countries in asia, africa and latin
america’.
(2) The ways in which these changes were
registered in the arts, literature and else-
where were profoundly gendered and
sexualized. ‘The territory of modernism,’
Pollock (1988, p. 54) argues, ‘so often is
a way of dealing with masculinesexual-
ityand its sign, the bodies of women’.
Representations of modern spaces were
made to revolve around masculine
subject-positions – like the mobile figure
of theflAˆneur– and to privilege en-
counters ‘between men who have the
freedom to take their pleasures in many
urban spaces and women from a class
subject to them who have to work in
those spaces often selling their bodies to
clients or to artists’. Indeed, Lefebvre’s
account of theproduction of space,
which was partly inspired by his encoun-
ters with surrealism and the Situationists,
repeatedly draws attention to the signifi-
cance of modernism for the triumph of
a ‘visual-phallic-geometric space’.
(3) Modernism was connected not only to
experimentation in the arts, but also to
new styles of philosophical reflection and
to the formation of the social sciences
(includingcritical theoryand Western
marxism, Lunn’s primary concern). But
most of these intellectual projects
retained the social markings, marginal-
izations and exclusions written into
metropolitan modernism.

Lunn’s characterizations work best when
applied to modernartandliteratureand
probably have less purchase on modern archi-
tecture, which has its own chronologies
(Frampton, 1992). These architectural motifs
assumed a wider significance in the 1950s and
1960s, when ahigh modernismemerged as a
dominant cultural thematic, distinguished by
what Bu ̈rger (1992) described as a ‘pathos of

purity’. ‘In the same way as architecture
divested itself of ornamental elements,’ he
argued, so ‘painting freed itself from the pri-
macy of the representational, and the nouveau
roman liberated itself from the categories
of traditional fiction (plot and character).’ In
much the same way, too, spatial science
divested human geography of an interest in
the particularities ofareal differentiation,
which became so much ‘surface noise’, in
order to reveal the purity of geometric form
andspatial structure(often, like architec-
ture, cast in terms of functionalism). It
would not be difficult to present other high
modernist movements in social thought in
much the same way, notablystructuralism.
From such a perspective,postmodernism
becomes a critique of high modernism rather
than of modernismtout court. It contains im-
portant echoes of the early-twentieth-century
avant-garde, and a number of writers have
urged the reclamation of that earlier modern-
ism as an indispensable moment in the formu-
lation of critical social theory. In fact, Berman
(1983) suggests that it had its roots even earl-
ier, in the nineteenth-century writings of
Baudelaire and Marx, both of whom (in dif-
ferent ways) sought to come to terms with a
world in which ‘all that is solid melts into air’.
Those human geographers most invested in
these reclamation projects have paid close
attention to the historical–geographical coord-
inates of modernism (above). Thus Harvey
(1989b) sought to expose some of the connec-
tions between the cultural formations of
modernism, the experience of time__space
compressionand the changing political econ-
omy of capitalism, which in turn provoked a
critique of the ways in which his own repre-
sentations erased the characteristic gendering
and sexualization of their maps of modernity
(Deutsche, 1996c). There have also been
specific studies: Harvey’s (2003a) excavation
of modernism and its material foundations in
nineteenth-century Paris, and Pinder’s (2005c)
exploration of forms of utopian modernism in
the twentieth century (seesituationism).
But the most deliberately modernist contri-
butions to contemporary human geography
are to be found in the work of Gunnar Olsson
and Allan Pred. Pred’s experimental studies of
European modernities (1995) and his extraor-
dinary re-creation of a ‘heart of darkness’ at
the very centre of ‘Swedish modern’ (2004)
were freely informed by the example of Walter
Benjamin; they beautifully exemplify all four
of Lunn’s diagnostics (above) and the radical,
critical impulse of early modernism that

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MODERNISM
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