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Epicurean aestheticism: De Quincey, Pater, Wilde, StoppardEmilsson, Wilhelm 11 1900 (has links)
This is a study of what I argue is a neglected side of Aestheticism. A standard definition of
Aestheticism is that its practitioners turn away from the general current of modernity to
protest its utilitarian and materialistic values, but this generalization ignores the profound
influence of contemporary philosophical and scientific thought on such major figures of
British Aestheticism as Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde. This study focuses on Aesthetes
who are not in flight from modernity. I call their type of Aestheticism "Epicurean
Aestheticism" and argue that since this temperament is characterized by a willingness to
engage with the flux of modern times it must be distinguished from the more familiar,
escapist form of Aestheticism I call "Platonic Aestheticism." I propose that Aestheticism
be viewed as a spectrum with Epicurean Aestheticism on one side and the Platonic variety
on the other. While Platonic Aesthetes like W. B . Yeats and Stephane Mallarme continue
the Romantic project of trying to counter modernity with various idealist and absolutist
philosophies, Epicurean Aesthetes adopt materialist and relativistic strategies in their
desire to make the most of modern life. I argue that the first unmistakable signs of
Epicurean Aestheticism are to be found in Thomas De Quincey, that the sensibility is fully
formulated be Pater, continued by Wilde, and finds a current representative in Tom
Stoppard. All Aesthetes are dedicated to the pursuit of beauty, but Platonic Aesthetes seek
beauty in an eternal and transcendent realm, while Epicurean Aesthetes have given up such
absolutist habits of thought. Pater writes: "Modern thought is distinguished from ancient
by its cultivation of the "relative" spirit in place of the "absolute." Epicurean Aesthetes
want a new aesthetic that will parallel the paradigm shift from absolutism to relativism.
While a nostalgic, quasi-religious longing for a purely ideal realm characterizes Platonic
Aesthetes, Epicurean Aesthetes accept that the high, idealistic road to eternal beauty is
closed. Instead of lamenting this fact, they start looking for beauty among the uncertainties
of the phenomenal world: by viewing life as an aesthetic spectacle to be observed and
experimented on with playful detachment they become Epicureans of the flux of
modernity.
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DAS LICHT DER KÜNSTE: HUGO VON HOFMANNSTHALS DIE FRAU OHNE SCHATTEN MIT BLICK AUF WALTER PATERS THE RENAISSANCEBurks, Marlo A. 31 August 2011 (has links)
Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s literary relation to Walter Pater has already been established in
the secondary literature; nevertheless, the Frau ohne Schatten has not been analysed with
respect to this relation. This project investigates the role of the arts (especially that of
architecture, painting, poetry, music and the carpet) in the story and connects this role
with the aesthetics that Pater sets out in The Renaissance. It will be shown that art in its
various forms is closely connected to the plot and action of the story. In the work of Pater
and Hofmannsthal, art even has a vivifying or animating function. Important
characteristics of art for Hofmannsthal and Pater are the relation of the arts to and
amongst one another, the idea that all things flow (following Heraclitus’ panta rhei, Gr.), and the concept of Anders-streben. The world of art and the world of reality
in its everyday sense will be shown through their ambiguous and even paradoxical
relation to one another. Hugo von Hofmannsthals literarisches Verhältnis zu Walter Pater ist in der
Sekundärliteratur schon belegt; trotzdem ist Die Frau ohne Schatten hinsichtlich dieses
Verhältnisses nie analysiert worden. Diese Arbeit untersucht die Rolle der Künste
(besonders der Architektur, Malerei, Dichtung, Musik und des Teppichs) in der
Erzählung und verbindet diese Rolle mit der Ästhetik, die Pater in The Renaissance
darlegte. Es wird gezeigt, dass die Kunst in ihrer verschiedenen Gestalten sehr eng mit
der Handlung der Erzählung verbunden ist. Bei Pater und Hofmannsthal hat die Kunst
sogar eine belebende Wirkung. Wichtige Merkmale der Kunst für Hofmannsthal und
Pater sind das Verhältnis der Künste untereinander, die Idee, dass alles fließt (nach
Heraklits panta rhei, Gr.), und das Konzept des Anders-strebens. Die Welt der
Kunst und die Welt der Wirklichkeit im alltäglichen Sinne werden durch ihre vieldeutige
und zumal paradoxe Beziehung zueinander gezeigt.
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Walter Pater, Oscar Wilde, and audiences of aestheticismMacLeod, Kirsten. January 1997 (has links)
By examining the process of production and reception of the works of Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde, this thesis explores the ways in which both conceptions of audience and actual audiences shaped these works. As proponents of "aestheticism," a philosophy which required the development of a highly specialised mode of perception and critical awareness, Pater and Wilde wrote with a fairly select audience in mind. Confronted, however, with actual readers who did not always meet the "aesthetic" criteria (even if they were supporters), they were forced to rethink their conceptions of audience. Pater's and Wilde's developing understandings of audience can be traced in their works, as they experiment with style and genre in an attempt to communicate effectively with their readers. Although at base Pater and Wilde advocated a similar "aesthetic" philosophy, their distinct conceptions of audience played a significant role in determining the nature of their particular versions of aestheticism.
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Undead children : reconsidering death and the child figure in late nineteenth-century fictionCrockford, Alison Nicole January 2012 (has links)
The Victorian obsession with the child is also often, in the world of literary criticism at least, an obsession with death, whether the death of the child itself or simply the inevitable death of childhood as a seemingly Edenic state of being. This study seeks to consider the way in which the child figure, in texts by four authors published at the end of the nineteenth century, is aligned with an inversion of this relationship. For Walter Pater, Vernon Lee, George MacDonald, and Henry James, the child is bound up instead with un-death, with a construction of death which seeks to remove the finitude, even the mortality, of death itself, or else a death which is expected or anticipated, yet always deferred. While in “The Child in the House” (1878) and “Emerald Uthwart” (1892), Pater places the child at the nexus of his construction of a death which is, rather than a finite ending, a return or a re-beginning, Lee's interest in the child figure's unique access to a world of art, explored in “The Child in the Vatican” (1883) and “Christkindchen” (1897) culminates in a dazzling vision of aesthetic transcendence with “Sister Benvenuta and the Christ Child” (1906). MacDonald, for whom death is already never really death, uses the never-dead child figure in At The Back of the North Wind (1871) and Lilith (1895) as an embodiment of his own distinct engagement with aestheticism, as well as a means by which to express the simultaneous anticipation and depression he experienced in contemplation of death. Finally James, in What Maisie Knew (1897), explores the child's inherent monstrosity as he crafts the possibility of a childhood which consciously refuses to die. This study explores a trajectory in which the child’s place within such reconsiderations of death grows increasingly intense, reaching an apex with MacDonald’s fantastic worlds, before considering James’s problematisation of the concept of the un-dead child in What Maisie Knew.
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The institution of modernism and the discourse of culture hellenism, decadence, and authority from Walter Pater to T. S Eliot /Calvert-Finn, John D., January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2004. / Document formatted into pages; contains viii, 403 p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 388-403). Abstract available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center; full text release delayed at author's request until 2009 Jun. 18.
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An analysis of the stylistic technique of Addison, Johnson, Hazlitt, and PaterChandler, Zilpha Emma, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Iowa, 1927. / Without thesis note. "General bibliography": p. 99.
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The classical-historical novel in nineteenth-century BritainWalker, Stanwood Sterling. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also in a digital version from UMI/Dissertation Abstracts International.
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Epicurean aestheticism: De Quincey, Pater, Wilde, StoppardEmilsson, Wilhelm 11 1900 (has links)
This is a study of what I argue is a neglected side of Aestheticism. A standard definition of
Aestheticism is that its practitioners turn away from the general current of modernity to
protest its utilitarian and materialistic values, but this generalization ignores the profound
influence of contemporary philosophical and scientific thought on such major figures of
British Aestheticism as Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde. This study focuses on Aesthetes
who are not in flight from modernity. I call their type of Aestheticism "Epicurean
Aestheticism" and argue that since this temperament is characterized by a willingness to
engage with the flux of modern times it must be distinguished from the more familiar,
escapist form of Aestheticism I call "Platonic Aestheticism." I propose that Aestheticism
be viewed as a spectrum with Epicurean Aestheticism on one side and the Platonic variety
on the other. While Platonic Aesthetes like W. B . Yeats and Stephane Mallarme continue
the Romantic project of trying to counter modernity with various idealist and absolutist
philosophies, Epicurean Aesthetes adopt materialist and relativistic strategies in their
desire to make the most of modern life. I argue that the first unmistakable signs of
Epicurean Aestheticism are to be found in Thomas De Quincey, that the sensibility is fully
formulated be Pater, continued by Wilde, and finds a current representative in Tom
Stoppard. All Aesthetes are dedicated to the pursuit of beauty, but Platonic Aesthetes seek
beauty in an eternal and transcendent realm, while Epicurean Aesthetes have given up such
absolutist habits of thought. Pater writes: "Modern thought is distinguished from ancient
by its cultivation of the "relative" spirit in place of the "absolute." Epicurean Aesthetes
want a new aesthetic that will parallel the paradigm shift from absolutism to relativism.
While a nostalgic, quasi-religious longing for a purely ideal realm characterizes Platonic
Aesthetes, Epicurean Aesthetes accept that the high, idealistic road to eternal beauty is
closed. Instead of lamenting this fact, they start looking for beauty among the uncertainties
of the phenomenal world: by viewing life as an aesthetic spectacle to be observed and
experimented on with playful detachment they become Epicureans of the flux of
modernity. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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Walter Pater, Oscar Wilde, and audiences of aestheticismMacLeod, Kirsten. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Loss unlimited : sadness and originality in Wordsworth, Pater, and AshberyKhalip, Jacques. January 1998 (has links)
Sadness in literature has often been thematically interpreted as an indication of literary originality. Notions of solitude, silence, and alienation contribute to the idea that melancholy benefits the introspective work of the artist. But it is also possible to explore sadness as a more complex literary phenomenon, one that expands the dimensions of affect and influences possibilities of aesthetic and ethical renovation that gesture beyond the usual themes of melancholy and solitude. Sadness thus does not come to be conceived as merely an aspect of mourning, but as a structure of loss that is intrinsic to our concept of the world's composition and insufficiencies. The energies that surround the experience of sadness measure the degree to winch many writers have been able to develop their sense of unhappiness into a way of charting the difficulties and transformative power of their own labours. As well, sadness in literature can be seen as illuminating a loss that writers generate in order to achieve through their art the possibility of aesthetic and even social reparation.
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