BLAST

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The following is a theoretical study of ''BLAST'' magazine conducted through digital means and techniques.  
 
The following is a theoretical study of ''BLAST'' magazine conducted through digital means and techniques.  
 
==Introduction==
 
==Introduction==
''BLAST'' was a literary magazine concerning an artistic and social movement called "Vorticism" that was published about a month before World War I began. Wyndham Lewis and Ezra Pound, authors of ''BLAST'', were the founders for the Vorticist movement. ''BLAST'' was, essentially, the birth of Vorticism, as this magazine is where the Vorticist Manifesto was first solidified and made publicly known.
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''BLAST'' was a literary magazine concerning an artistic and social movement called "Vorticism". Wyndham Lewis and Ezra Pound, the founders of the Vorticist movement, were also effectively the chief authors of the two-issue magazine. ''BLAST'' contained, among other piece of literature, an aggressive manifesto by Lewis "blasting" conventional British art and culture and proclaiming the Vorticist aesthetic: ‘The New Vortex plunges to the heart of the Present – we produce a New Living Abstraction’.
  
In our exploration of ''BLAST'', we aimed to understand how the outbreak of World War I impacted the second issue of the magazine.
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In our exploration of ''BLAST'', we aimed to understand how the outbreak of World War I impacted the second issue of the magazine.The war broke out a mere month after the first issue, and we pondered how the conflict affected the heart of the Vorticist movement and, consequently, the content of the magazine.
 
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The concepts that most captured our interest were the inclusions and uses of the words "war", "art", and "man". How did the beginning of World War 1 impact the publication and how does the altered usage of these words articulate the resulting differences?
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==Timeline==
 
==Timeline==

Revision as of 00:47, 7 March 2017

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