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The Orient of Style: Modernist Allegories of Conversion
Contributor(s): Schlossman, Beryl (Author)
ISBN: 0822310767     ISBN-13: 9780822310761
Publisher: Duke University Press
OUR PRICE:   $102.55  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 1990
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | European - French
Dewey: 840.900
LCCN: 90-38620
Lexile Measure: 1480
Physical Information: 306 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - French
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In this study of modernist aesthetics, Beryl Schlossman reveals how for such writers as Marcel Proust, Gustave Flaubert, and Charles Baudelaire, the Orient came to symbolize the highest aspirations of literary representation. She demonstrates that through allegory, modernism became a style itself, a style that married the ancient and the modern and that emerged as both a cause and an effect, both an ideal construct and an textual materiality, all symbolized by the Orient--land of style, place of plurality, and site of the coexistence of holy lands.
Toward the end of Remembrance of Things Past, the narrator describes the act of creating a work of art as a conversion of sensation into a spiritual equivalent. By means of such allegories of "conversion," Schlossman shows, the modernist artist disappeared within the work of art and left behind the trace of his sublime vocation, a vocation in which he was transformed, in Schlossman's words, "into a kind of priest kneeling at the altar of beauty before the masked divinity of representation."
The author shows how allegory--the representation of the symbolic as something real--was adapted by modernist writers to reflect subjectivity while masking an authorial origin. She reveals how modernist allegory arose, as Walter Benjamin suggests, at the crossroads of history, sociology, economics, urban architecture, and art--providing a kind of map of capitalism--and was produced through the eyes of a melancholic gazing at a "monument of absence."