AUC PHILOLOGICA
AUC PHILOLOGICA

AUC Philologica (Acta Universitatis Carolinae Philologica) is an academic journal published by Charles University. It publishes scholarly articles in a large number of disciplines (English, German, Greek and Latin, Oriental, Romance and Slavonic studies, as well as in phonetics and translation studies), both on linguistic and on literary and cultural topics. Apart from articles it publishes reviews of new academic books or special issues of academic journals.

The journal is indexed in CEEOL, DOAJ, EBSCO, and ERIH PLUS.

AUC PHILOLOGICA, Vol 2014 No 3 (2014), 223–231

Žena a stroj. Představy modernity a sexuální utopie v evropské avantgardě dvacátých let. Vybrané příklady

[Woman and Machine: Concepts of Modernity and Sexual Utopia in the European Avant-garde of the 1920s. Selected Examples]

Emiliano Ranocchi

published online: 17. 03. 2015

abstract

Using selected examples from early avant-garde literature, the present paper tries to show that sexuality always played an important role in the 20th century’s utopias and is inseparable from their political side. In fact, it is political in itself. The author begins by analyzing the reputation of misogyny which affected futurism at its very beginning, due to several statements of the movement’s founder, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. However, he does not stop at the surface of these texts, but rather, tries to emphasize the other side of futuristic misogyny: by refusing to attribute to the woman her traditional role, Marinetti in fact opened the way for women’s emancipation. The futurists of the second generation distance themselves from the ideology of the founder, but continue exploring the role of women in the future world in different directions: one direction led to the past and wished mankind would come back to nature (Vasari), the other explored the possibilities inherent in gender equality, detaching sexuality from gender, thus anticipating post-human scenarios (Fillia). The paper also provides examples of how imagination about sexual life in the future world became an essential ingredient of almost all dystopian visions of the 1920s and early 1930s, and explores some links and similarities between them (ao Čapek, Sosnkowski, Zamyatin, Huxley).

keywords: futurism; sexuality; machine; modernism; dystopia futurismus; sexualita; stroj; modernismus; antiutopie

230 x 157 mm
periodicity: 3 x per year
print price: 150 czk
ISSN: 0567-8269
E-ISSN: 2464-6830

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