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Looking back over the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Europe and North America, one can see the emerging patterns of antimodernism beneath or within modernity. The emergence of antimodernism during this period is important because it is not restricted only to this or that obscure figure, but is a fundamental theme implicit or explicit within the works of many major figures—indeed, in many respects antimodernism is a leitmotif for the defining figures of the modern period. What are we to make of this seeming paradox: that so many modernist figures are in fact antimodernist by inclination? This is a...
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