Decadent movement was a late-19th-century artistic and literary movement, centered in Western Europe, that followed an aesthetic ideology of excess and artificiality.
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Decadent movement was a late-19th-century artistic and literary movement, centered in Western Europe, that followed an aesthetic ideology of excess and artificiality.
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The Decadent movement was characterized by a belief in the superiority of human creativity and pleasure over logic and the natural world.
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Decadent movement later used the term decadence to include the subversion of traditional categories in pursuit of full, sensual expression.
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Decadent movement was explicitly interested in the Satanic, and he frequently sought to portray the double-threat of Satan and Woman.
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Decadent movement defined this group as those who had been influenced heavily by Baudelaire, though they were influenced by Gothic novels and the poetry and fiction of Edgar Allan Poe.
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Not everyone was comfortable with Baju and Le Decadent movement, even including some who had been published in its pages.
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Writers who embraced the sort of decadence featured in Le Decadent movement include Albert Aurier, Rachilde, Pierre Vareilles, Miguel Hernandez, Jean Lorrain and Laurent Tailhade.
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In France, the Decadent movement is often said to have begun with either Joris-Karl Huysmans' Against Nature or Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal.
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In France, the heart of the Decadent movement was during the 1880s and 1890s, the time of fin de siecle, or end-of-the-century gloom.
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Decadent movement defined this common, decadent thread as "an intense self-consciousness, a restless curiosity in research, an over-subtilizing refinement upon refinement, a spiritual and moral perversity".
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Decadent movement referred to all such literature as "a new and beautiful and interesting disease".
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Many of those associated with the Decadent movement became symbolists after initially associating freely with decadents.
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Czech writers who were exposed to the work of the Decadent movement saw in it the promise of a life they could never know.
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Decadent movement reached into Russia primarily through exposure to the writings of Charles Baudelaire and Paul Verlaine.
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The first Russian writers to achieve success as followers of this Decadent movement included Konstanin Balmont, Fyodor Sologub, Valery Bryusov, and Zinaida Gippius.
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Decadent movement's works were a cry of denouncement against injustice and oppression.
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Decadent movement embraced the most debauched lifestyle of the French decadents and celebrated that life in his own poetry.
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Decadent movement had some interaction with Oscar Wilde, and he valued decadence in his personal life.
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Decadent movement has been lauded to his dedication to this cause throughout his career, but it has been suggested that, while he lived as a decadent and heralded their work, his own work was more frustrated, hopeless, and empty of the pleasure that had attracted him to the movement in the first place.
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Decadent movement's language was colorful and vitriolic, often invoking the worship of Satan.
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