Description
It’s been said that the real hidden hand behind modern civilization has been a series of nonstop wars between various secret societies.
Learn how the French Revolution not only created an octopus-like New World Order which still exists today, but also how intellectuals such as John Locke, Voltaire, and Rousseau inspired it. Thorn explains the role Richard Wagner played in the development of modernism, and how Pablo Picasso’s paintings lead to the rise of multiculturalism, among dozens of other examples.
Softcover, 252 pages
1) Introduction: Right vs. Left Hand Paths
2) John Locke: Europe’s First Bona Fide Liberal
3) Voltaire: The Age of Reason
4) Jean-Jacques Rousseau: The Noble Savage
5) The French Revolution
6) Emanuel Swedenborg & William Blake
7) Romanticism: William Wordsworth & Samuel Taylor Coleridge
8) The Tragedies of Lord Byron & Percy Bysshe Shelley
9) Honore de Balzac: The Human Comedy
10) Richard Wagner: First Modern Artist
11) Gustave Flaubert: Madame Bovary
12) Charles Baudelaire: Flowers of Evil
13) Arthur Rimbaud & Paul Verlaine: A Derangement of the Senses
14) Sarah Bernhardt: The World’s First Modern Woman
15) Impressionism: Manet, Monet & Cezanne
16) Guy de Maupassant: Letters of a Madman
17) Paul Gauguin: The Art World’s First Multiculturalist
18) Vincent Van Gogh Did Not Commit Suicide
19) Oscar Wilde: The Picture of Dorian Gray
20) Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec: Hooker-Loving Dwarf
21) Thomas Hardy: Tess of the D’Urbervilles
22) Edvard Munch: The Scream
23) Alfred Jarry: Enter the Trickster
24) Ernest Dowson: The Tragic Generation
25) Gustav Klimt: Femme Fatales
26) Paris: City of Lights
27) Andre Gide: The Immoralist
28) Gertrude Stein and the Left Bank Lesbians
29) Fauvism: Henri Matisse and the Wild Beasts
30) Expressionism: Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
31) George Bernard Shaw: Fabian Socialism
32) Otto Gross: Sexual Revolution
33) Erotica
34) Futurism: Filippo Marinetti
35) Guillaume Apollinaire: The Heretic
36) Abstract Art: Wassily Kandinsky
37) Ballets Russes: Sergei Diaghilev, Vaslav Nijinsky & Igor Stravinsky
38) Egon Schiele: Viennese Sexplosion
39) Coco Chanel, Flappers, & Zelda Fitzgerald
40) Marcel Duchamp: Anti-Artist
41) Dadaism
42) Tristan Tzara: Automatic Poetry
43) Arthur Cravan: Avant-Garde Provocateur
44) Silent Horror Films: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari & Nosferatu
45) Decadent Berlin
46) James Joyce: Ulysses (or, Modernism’s Naughty Letters)
47) Andre Breton: Surrealism’s Black Priest
48) Louis Icart: Art Deco
49) Paris: La Revue Nègre
50) D.H. Lawrence: Lady Chatterley’s Lover
51) Un Chien Andalou: Luis Buñuel & Salvador Dali
52) Jean Cocteau: The Holy Terrors
53) Hermann Hesse: Steppenwolf
54) Antonin Artaud: Theater of Cruelty
55) Knut Hamsun: Hunger
56) Jean Genet: A Thief’s Journal
57) Willem de Kooning: Abstract Expressionism
58) Vladimir Nabokov: Lolita
59) Francois Truffaut: French New Wave Cinema
60) Vienna Action Group
61) Federico Fellini: Satyricon
62) Pierre Molinier: Photographic Fetishism
63) Index: Crazy Carl Robinson’s review of Outlaw Rebels
European cultural timeline: 1300s to 1960s