2月3日 (新年初三)今昔 (2~3):News from the Henry Moore Foundation (et Aug 12, 2020)。哈佛校友會。 回顧。1922年及當年國際文藝盛事。Sinclair Lewis's;Virginia Woolf's vs Katherine Mansfield's周作人《談虎集》共3本。芥川龍之介,《羅生門/竹林中》。Charles Ray Is Pushing Sculpture to Its Limit
https://www.facebook.com/hanching.chung/videos/356909259337517
2月3日 (新年初三)今昔 (2):1922年及當年國際文藝盛事Sinclair Lewis's;Virginia Woolf's vs Katherine Mansfield's周作人《談虎集》共3本。芥川龍之介,《羅生門/竹林中》。Charles Ray Is Pushing Sculpture to Its Limit
https://www.facebook.com/hanching.chung/videos/465019148414302
2月3日 (新年初三)今昔 (1):柯比意 (Le Corbusier ) 24座建築;1922年最危險的《尤利西斯》 ( Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’)初版、他給孫兒說的故事《貓與魔鬼》(The Cat and the Devil)
https://www.facebook.com/hanching.chung/videos/655992158779510
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Charles Ray Is Pushing Sculpture to Its Limit
With four surveys, the challenging Los Angeles artist has redefined his art form in a flat-screen world.
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中午會介紹這篇
Sinclair Lewis's ground-breaking novel Babbitt was published in 1922 (Credit: Chicago History Museum/Getty Images)
Ryūnosoke Akutagawa's story In a Bamboo Grove is best known as the source for Akira Kurosawa's classic film Rashomon (Credit: Alamy)
Virginia Woolf's 1922 novel Jacob's Room was her first experimental work (Credit: Mondadori via Getty Images)
BBC.COM
Why 1922 was literature's greatest year
Joyce's Ulysses and Eliot's The Waste Land are rightly hailed as masterpieces
May Sinclair's writing was symbolic of the "New Woman" movement, which questioned the roles of women in society (Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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- 這一年的夏天,加拿大科學家班廷和他的助手研究糖尿病治療方法的時候,他們製成了一種可以控制血糖的注射藥物-人造胰島素。
- 長篇小說《尤利西斯》出版,是愛爾蘭意識流文學的代表作,並被譽為20世紀百大英文小說之首。
- 大英帝國達到國力最盛的時期。
- 這一年華盛頓會議期間,中國和日本在會外簽訂《解決山東問題懸案條約》及附約,山東問題解決並廢除部分二十一條。
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This article is about the year 1922. For other uses, see 1922 (disambiguation).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1922
出生死亡之名錄
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1922 by topic
Subject
Anime
Archaeology
Architecture
Works[edit]
- Max Beckmann – The Iron Footbridge
- Alvar Cawén – Sokea soittoniekka (Blind Musician)
- Jean Charlot – The Massacre of the Templo Mayor (mural, Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso, Mexico City)
- Salvador Dalí – Cabaret Scene
- Giorgio de Chirico – The Prodigal Son (Il figliol prodigo)
- Otto Dix – Lustmord ("Lust Murder", watercolor)
- Lydia Field Emmet – Harriet Lancashire White and Her Children
- Mark Gertler – Queen of Sheba
- J. W. Godward
- Contemplation
- Nu Sur la Plage
- Juan Gris – Le Pierrot
- Paul Klee – Twittering Machine
- George Washington Lambert – Anzac, the landing, 1915
- John Lavery – Michael Collins (Love of Ireland)
- Max Liebermann – Albert Einstein
- L. S. Lowry – A Manufacturing Town
- Edward McCartan – Dream Lady (Eugene Field Memorial, Chicago)
- Dugald Sutherland MacColl – On the Terrace
- Sydney March
- Bromley War Memorial (London)
- Lancaster Monument (The Angel of Death, East Sheen Cemetery, London)
- André Masson – Pedestal Table in the Studio
- Joan Miró – The Farm
- Charles Henry Niehaus – Orpheus with the Awkward Foot
- William Orpen – To the Unknown British Soldier in France[3]
- Maxfield Parrish – Daybreak
- Pablo Picasso – Two Women Running on the Beach (The Race)
- Charles Sheeler – Pertaining to Yachts and Yachting
- Sophie Taeuber-Arp – Oval Composition with Abstract Motifs
Events[edit]
This is a significant year for high modernism in English literature.[1]
- January – Ryūnosuke Akutagawa's modernist short story "In a Grove" (藪の中, Yabu no naka) is published in the Japanese magazine Shinchō.
- January 24 – Façade – An Entertainment, poems by Edith Sitwell recited over an instrumental accompaniment by William Walton, are first performed, privately in London.[2]
- January 27 – Franz Kafka begins intensive work on his novel The Castle (Das Schloss) at the mountain resort of Spindlermühle, ceasing around early September in mid-sentence.[3]
- February 2
- In a "savage creative storm" of less than three weeks beginning today at Château de Muzot in Switzerland, Rainer Maria Rilke writes his Sonnets to Orpheus (Die Sonette an Orpheus) and completes his Duino Elegies (Duineser Elegien).
- The modernist novel Ulysses by James Joyce is published complete in book form by Sylvia Beach's Shakespeare and Company in Paris (on 2/2/22, Joyce's 40th birthday), with a further edition in Paris for the Egoist Press, London, on October 12, much of it seized by the United States Customs Service). The U.K. customs will also seize copies entering the country.[4]
- February–September – D. H. and Frieda Lawrence migrate from Europe to the United States, visiting Australia on the way, where he completes writing his novel Kangaroo.
- March 3 – F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Beautiful and Damned is published in book form by Charles Scribner's Sons in New York; on December 10 a silent film version is released.
- c. March 8 – The Czech playwrights Karel and Josef Čapek's play Pictures from the Insects' Life (Ze života hmyzu, also known as The Insect Play, published 1921) is first performed at the National Theatre Brno. It is also first performed this year in English translation, in the United States.
- April – Marcel Proust's Sodome et Gomorrhe II (part of the novel sequence À la Recherche du temps perdu) is published in Paris.
- May 18 – Marcel Proust, James Joyce, Sergei Diaghilev, Igor Stravinsky, Pablo Picasso, Erik Satie and Clive Bell, hosted by English art patron and novelist Sydney Schiff, dine in Paris at the Hotel Majestic: their one joint meeting.[5]
- May 27 – F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" is published in The Smart Set magazine.
- June
- F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz" appears in Collier's magazine.
- Over one night at his home in Shaftsbury, Vermont, Robert Frost completes the poem "New Hampshire" and at sunrise writes "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening".[6]
- July – Having issued a 2nd edition of António Botto's poetry collection Canções through his Lisbon publishing house Olisipo, Fernando Pessoa publishes a magazine article praising Botto's courage and sincerity in shamelessly singing homosexual love as a true aesthete,[7] sparking controversy over literatura de Sodoma.
- August – T. E. Lawrence is recruited into the British Royal Air Force as Ordinary Aircraftman 352087 John Hume Ross by Flying Officer W. E. Johns in London. Lawrence later writes The Mint about his experiences.
- Summer – F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby (1925) is set on Long Island at this time, partly inspired by Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald's life from October 9 at Great Neck, New York, with the novelist Ring Lardner and the newspaper editor Herbert Bayard Swope as friends and neighbors.
- September
- Marcel Proust's sequence À la Recherche du temps perdu begins to appear in English in a translation by C. K. Scott Moncrieff of Swann's Way, as the first volume of Remembrance of Things Past. This occurs two months before the author's death.
- T. S. Eliot and E. M. Forster stay in the country with Virginia Woolf and discuss Joyce's Ulysses.[8]
- September 14 – Sinclair Lewis's satirical novel Babbitt is published by Harcourt, Brace & Company.
- September 22
- Bengali writer Kazi Nazrul Islam publishes the poem "Anandamoyeer Agamane" (The Advent of the Delightful Mother) in support of the Indian independence movement, in the Puja issue of his new biweekly Dhumketu. For this he is arrested in the Bengal Presidency and imprisoned on a charge of sedition for much of the following year. He goes on a hunger strike and composes many poems while in prison. His poem "Bidrohi" (বিদ্রোহী, The Rebel, December 1921) appears in his first anthology, Agnibeena.
- F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story collection Tales of the Jazz Age is published by Charles Scribner's Sons in New York.
- September 29 – Drums in the Night (Trommeln in der Nacht), at the Munich Kammerspiele, becomes the first play by Bertolt Brecht to be staged.
- October 15 – T. S. Eliot founds The Criterion magazine (October 15), with the first appearance of his poem The Waste Land.[2] This will be first fully published in book form by Boni & Liveright in New York in December.
- October 26 – Jacob's Room by Virginia Woolf is published by the Hogarth Press of Richmond upon Thames with a jacket design by the author's sister Vanessa Bell. Also this summer, Woolf writes the short story "Mrs Dalloway in Bond Street" (published July 1923), the groundwork of the novel Mrs Dalloway (1925).
- November – Uri Zvi Greenberg flees to Berlin after the second issue of the Yiddish literary journal Albatros, which he edits, is seized. The Warsaw authorities accuse him of blasphemy for iconoclastic depictions of Jesus, notably his prose poem "Royte epl fun veybeymer" (Red Apples from the Trees of Pain).
- December – A valise containing all Ernest Hemingway's manuscripts of the past year's writing is stolen at Paris-Gare de Lyon.
- December 6 – W. B. Yeats becomes a nominated member of the Seanad Éireann in the Irish Free State.
- December 10 – The National Library of Albania is inaugurated in Tirana.[9]
- December 20 – Jean Cocteau's Antigone appears at the reopened Théâtre de l'Atelier in the Montmartre district of Paris, with sets by Pablo Picasso, music by Arthur Honegger and costumes by Gabrielle Chanel. Génica Athanasiou plays the title rôle, with Charles Dullin as Créon and Antonin Artaud as Tiresias. There are Dadaist protests.[10]
- unknown date – The first Newbery Medal for authors of distinguished children's books is awarded by the American Library Association to Hendrik Willem van Loon for The Story of Mankind (1921).[11]
- T. S. Eliot – The Waste Land
- Thomas Hardy – Late Lyrics and Earlier, with Many Other Verses[2]
- A. E. Housman – Last Poems
Poetry
Meteorology
Music
Country
Jazz
Rail transport
Radio
Science
Sports
Football
Television
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Michelangelo Antonioni documentary
2022.2.3
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