1922  

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== Art and culture == == Art and culture ==
===Cinema=== ===Cinema===
 +*[[Kino-Pravda]] launched in June
*[[Grauman's Egyptian Theatre]] openened *[[Grauman's Egyptian Theatre]] openened
*''[[Nosferatu]]'' by F. W. Murnau *''[[Nosferatu]]'' by F. W. Murnau
*''[[Häxan]]'' by Benjamin Christensen *''[[Häxan]]'' by Benjamin Christensen
*''[[Phantom (1922 film)|Phantom]]'' by F. W. Murnau *''[[Phantom (1922 film)|Phantom]]'' by F. W. Murnau
 +*''[[Les Grenouilles qui demandent un roi]]'' by Ladislas Starevich
===Radio=== ===Radio===
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===Literature=== ===Literature===
-*Eliot's ''[[The Waste Land]]''+====Fiction====
-*Joyce's ''[[Ulysses (novel)|Ulysses]]''+
-*[[Medusa's Head]], an essay by Freud+
-*''[[Anthologica Rarissima: The Way of a Virgin]]'' by L. and C Brovan+
*''[[Les Malheurs des immortels]]'', a collage novel by Max Ernst with text by Paul Éluard *''[[Les Malheurs des immortels]]'', a collage novel by Max Ernst with text by Paul Éluard
 +*''[[The Waste Land]]'' by T. S. Eliot
 +*''[[Ulysses (novel)|Ulysses]]'' by Joyce
 +*''[[Anthologica Rarissima: The Way of a Virgin]]'' by L. and C Brovan
* ''[[My Life and Loves]]'' by Frank Harris, first volume * ''[[My Life and Loves]]'' by Frank Harris, first volume
 +* ''[[Les fleurs du mal : les épaves (1922, Jacques Crépet)|Les fleurs du mal : les épaves]]'' by Charles Baudelaire
* [[Babbitt (novel)|''Babbitt'']] by Sinclair Lewis * [[Babbitt (novel)|''Babbitt'']] by Sinclair Lewis
-* ''[[Les fleurs du mal : les épaves (1922, Jacques Crépet)|Les fleurs du mal : les épaves]]'' by Charles Baudelaire+*''[[Captain Blood (novel) |Captain Blood]]'' by Rafael Sabatini
-* "[[Mohammed and Charlemagne ]]" by Henri Pirenne+
-*''[[Captain Blood (novel) |Captain Blood]]'' (1922) by Rafael Sabatini+
*"[[Herbert West–Reanimator]]" by Lovecraft *"[[Herbert West–Reanimator]]" by Lovecraft
-*[[Concerning Specific Forms of Masturbation]]+*"[[The Music of Erich Zann]]" by H. P. Lovecraft
*[[L'Étonnant Voyage d'Hareton Ironcastle]] by J.-H. Rosny aîné *[[L'Étonnant Voyage d'Hareton Ironcastle]] by J.-H. Rosny aîné
 +*''[[The Man Who Knew Too Much (book)|The Man Who Knew Too Much]]'' by G. K. Chesterton
 +*[[The Beautiful and Damned]] by F. Scott Fitzgerald
 +
 +====Non-fiction====
 +* "[[Medusa's Head]]", an essay by Freud
 +* "[[Mohammed and Charlemagne]]" by Henri Pirenne
 +* "[[Concerning Specific Forms of Masturbation]]" by Wilhelm Reich
 +* "[[Some Remarks on Tobacco]]" by Eric Hiller
 +* ''[[Argonauts of the Western Pacific]]'' by Bronisław Malinowski
 +* ''[[Public Opinion (book)|Public Opinion]]'' by Walter Lippmann
 +* ''[[A soi-même]]'', an autobiographical text by Odilon Redon
 +* ''[[Degeneration in the Great French Masters]]'' by Jean Carrère
 +*''[[Parodie im Mittelalter]]'' by Paul Lehmann
===Art=== ===Art===
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*[[Jeanne Lanvin]]'s bathroom (1920-22) by [[Armand-Albert Rateau]] *[[Jeanne Lanvin]]'s bathroom (1920-22) by [[Armand-Albert Rateau]]
*[[Lustmord (Otto Dix)]] *[[Lustmord (Otto Dix)]]
 +*[[Adolf Loos]] submits a single colossal [[Doric column]] to the 1922 [[Chicago Tribune]] competition
===Theatre=== ===Theatre===
*[[The Cat and the Canary (play)|''The Cat and the Canary'']], a play by John Willard *[[The Cat and the Canary (play)|''The Cat and the Canary'']], a play by John Willard
 +*[[Le Cocu magnifique]], staged by [[Vsevolod Meyerhold]], with set and props based on the designs of [[Lyubov Popova]]
== Births == == Births ==
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*[[Christian Dotremont]] (1922-1979) *[[Christian Dotremont]] (1922-1979)
*[[Lyle Stuart]] (August 11, 1922 – June 24, 2006) *[[Lyle Stuart]] (August 11, 1922 – June 24, 2006)
-*[[Henri Chopin]] (18 June 1922 – 3 January 2008), French poet and musician.+*[[Henri Chopin]] (18 June 1922 – 3 January 2008), French poet and musician
- +*[[Yma Sumac]] (September 13, 1922 (birth certificate) – November 1, 2008)
 +*[[José Saramago]] (November 16, 1922 – June 18, 2010)
 +*[[Raymond Devos]] (November 9, 1922 – June 15, 2006)
==Deaths == ==Deaths ==
*[[Marcel Proust]] (1871 – 1922) *[[Marcel Proust]] (1871 – 1922)
*[[November 21]] - [[Iwan Bloch]] (b. 1872) *[[November 21]] - [[Iwan Bloch]] (b. 1872)
- +*[[Hermann Rorschach]] (8 November 1884 – 1 April 1922)
 +*[[Otto Augustus Wall]] (1846-1922)
 +*[[Henri Désiré Landru]] (April 12, 1869 – February 25, 1922)
 +*[[André Tridon]] (1877 - 1922)
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Current revision

The Hurdanos were unknown, even in Spain, until a road was built for the first time in 1922. Nowhere does man need to wage a more desperate fight against the hostile forces of nature.” --opening title card to Land Without Bread (1933)


"I have examined maps of the city with the greatest care, yet have never again found the Rue d’Auseil. These maps have not been modern maps alone, for I know that names change. I have, on the contrary, delved deeply into all the antiquities of the place; and have personally explored every region, of whatever name, which could possibly answer to the street I knew as the Rue d’Auseil. But despite all I have done it remains an humiliating fact that I cannot find the house, the street, or even the locality, where, during the last months of my impoverished life as a student of metaphysics at the university, I heard the music of Erich Zann." --The Music of Erich Zann" (1922) by H. P. Lovecraft


"This feeble, lachrymose, gloomy soul has multiplied itself by the glamour and influence of the Confessions, Emile, the Nouvelle Heloise, and the eloquent Discours. It created a whole new literature; and the prestige of this literature still dazes us. Rousseau was the father of morbid Romanticism; Dante the spirit which evoked the luminous Renaissance and the glorious classical centuries. We shall meet again this malady of " self," in different forms, in all the " bad masters " of the nineteenth century. It will inspire the melancholy of Chateaubriand, the vulgar ambition of Balzac's heroes, the misanthropy of Stendhal, the rebellious passion of George Sand, Flaubert's despair, the amorous feebleness of Musset, Baudelaire's dream, Verlaine's moral decadence, and Zola's pessimism. There is in the work of Rousseau the germ of all that is unhealthy in the nineteenth century." --Degeneration In The Great French Masters (1922)

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<< 1921 1923 >>

1922 (MCMXXII) was the 1922nd year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 922nd year of the 2nd millennium, the 22nd year of the 20th century, and the 3rd year of the 1920s decade.


Contents

Events

Art and culture

Cinema

Radio

  • US government allotted the choicest frequencies to operators who promised not to broadcast records

Literature

Fiction

Non-fiction

Art

Theatre

Births

Deaths




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