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Late Style and Its Discontents: Essays in Art, Literature, and Music
Contributor(s): McMullan, Gordon (Editor), Smiles, Sam (Editor)
ISBN: 0198704623     ISBN-13: 9780198704621
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $114.00  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 2016
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism
- Music | Genres & Styles - Classical
- Art | History - Renaissance
Physical Information: 1.1" H x 6" W x 9.3" (1.25 lbs) 294 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Late style is a critical term routinely deployed to characterise the work of selected authors, composers, and creative artists as they enter their last phase of production--often, but not only, in old age. Taken at face value, this terminology merely points to a chronological division in the
artist's oeuvre, late being the antonym of early or the third term in the triad early-middle-late. However, almost from its inception, the idea of late style or late work has been freighted with aesthetic associations and expectations that promote it as a special episode in the artist's
creative life. Late style is often characterized as the imaginative response made by exceptional talents to the imminence of their death. In their confrontation with death creative artists, critics claim, produce work that is by turns a determination to continue while strength remains, a summation
of their life's work and a radical vision of the essence of their craft. And because this creative phenomenon is understood as primarily an existential response to a common fate, so late style is understood as something that transcends the particularities of place, time and medium. Critics seeking
to understand late work regularly invoke the examples of Titian, Goethe, and Beethoven as exemplars of what constitutes late work, proposing that something unites the late style of authors, composers, and creative artists who otherwise would not be bracketed together and that lateness per se is a
special order of creative work.

The essays in this collection resist this position. Ranging across literature, the visual arts, music, and scientific work, the material assembled here looks closely at the material, biographical and other contexts in which the work was produced and seeks both to question the assumptions surrounding
late style and to prompt a more critical understanding of the last works of writers, artists and composers.