Degeneration

E514446

Degeneration is an 1892 book by Max Nordau that offers a scathing critique of fin-de-siècle European art, literature, and culture, arguing that many modernist trends reflect psychological and moral decay.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Degeneration canonical 1

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf book
literary criticism
author Max Nordau NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin Germany
criticizes Decadent movement NERFINISHED
Henrik Ibsen NERFINISHED
Impressionism NERFINISHED
Naturalism
Nietzsche NERFINISHED
Oscar Wilde NERFINISHED
Richard Wagner NERFINISHED
Symbolism NERFINISHED
Tolstoy NERFINISHED
fin-de-siècle European art
fin-de-siècle European culture
fin-de-siècle European literature
Émile Zola NERFINISHED
genre cultural criticism
psychological criticism
social criticism
hasPart analysis of contemporary artists
analysis of contemporary writers
discussion of nervous disorders
discussion of social decay
influenced conservative criticism of modernism
discourse on degenerate art
early 20th-century cultural debates
notableFor pathologizing modernist art and literature
scathing critique of fin-de-siècle culture
originalLanguage German
originalTitle Entartung
positionOnModernism hostile
publicationYear 1892
subject aesthetics
decadence
degeneration theory
fin-de-siècle culture
modern art
modern literature
modernism
psychopathology
theoreticalBasis contemporary psychiatry
positivism
social Darwinism
tone moralizing
polemical
usesConcept degenerate art
degeneration
heredity

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Max Nordau notableWork Degeneration