UID:
almafu_9959242918502883
Umfang:
1 online resource (251 p.)
Ausgabe:
1st ed.
ISBN:
1-282-26542-3
,
9786612265426
,
94-012-0468-3
,
1-4356-1192-6
Serie:
Faux titre ; 298
Inhalt:
In an era when reality was aestheticized as collectibles, Octave Mirbeau unleashed his fiction like a destructive machine, setting fire to stale material and discredited ideologies, burning them as fuel and expelling texts as clean emissions. In this first English-language overview of all the novels published under Mirbeau’s name, this study argues that Mirbeau is unique among his fin-de-siècle peers. Unlike the Decadents, whose art was a reliquary in which dead inspiration was preserved, Mirbeau disengaged himself from the corpses of past works. Abhorring tradition and complacency, Mirbeau elaborated a kinetics of fiction that made the novel into an agent of violent transformation. Contrasting the Decadents’ aesthetic of elegant morbidity with Mirbeau’s vitalistic view of fiction, this volume shows Mirbeau modeling himself on the figure of the torture artist, cutting up his finished works, building novels to disassemble them, fitting them together in revolutionary ways. Creativity for Mirbeau fertilizes un jardin des supplices , a cemetery smoldering with decomposing texts that are resolved into their constituent parts and then reemerge in different guises. In Mirbeau’s writing, lives and art works are only transient aggregates of material, and creativity is immortalized through the perishing of old forms.
Anmerkung:
Description based upon print version of record.
,
Preliminary Material -- Art as Repair: Le Calvaire -- Iconoclasm: L’Abbé Jules -- The Perfect Death: Sébastien Roch -- Reaching Up: Dans le ciel -- A Way Out: Un gentilhomme -- The Undifferentiated Bed: Le Jardin des supplices -- Fetish and Meaning: Le Journal d’une femme de chambre -- From Matter to Motion: Les 21 jours d’un neurasthénique -- The Novel as Machine: La 628-E8 -- Non-human Narrative: Dingo -- Conclusion -- References -- Index.
,
English
Weitere Ausg.:
ISBN 90-420-2237-X
Sprache:
Englisch
Schlagwort(e):
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
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