the genius and romantic madness. romanticism -- alexander pushkin (1799-1837) emerged in germany and...

Post on 18-Jan-2018

221 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Prince Vladimir Odoevsky, Last descendent of first Russian Princes, Ruriks Philosopher, writer, pedagogue, philanthropist,music critic Most famous literary work Russian Nights, 1844 Imitated German Gothic/Fantastic writers Hoffman and Tieck

TRANSCRIPT

The Genius and Romantic Madness

Romanticism -- Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837)

• Emerged in Germany and Britain in late 1790s, in France and Russia 1820s

• Rejected Neoclassicism, rationalism, imitation in art

• Privileged individual self-expression, sincerity, originality, emotional intensity and extremes

• Exalted creative imagination and individual, national genius

Prince Vladimir Odoevsky, 1803-1869

• Last descendent of first Russian Princes, Ruriks

• Philosopher, writer, pedagogue, philanthropist,music critic

• Most famous literary work Russian Nights, 1844

• Imitated German Gothic/Fantastic writers Hoffman and Tieck

Giambattista Piranesi, Italian architect

• Visualized ancient Rome from study of ancient ruin (fashion for ruins)

• Carceri d’Invenzione, 1749-1750, 1761

• Only one church built, S. Maria del Priorato

• Tremendous influence on Romantics and on modernist cinematic imagination

The Eternal/Wandering Jew• Legendary figure of Jewish

shoemaker (or Roman) who insulted Christ on road to Cavalry: as punishment must wander until Second Coming

• Biblical basis: Matthew 16:28• Metaphor for the Jewish Diaspora,

or allegory for anyone who has been made to see error of wickedness -- mocking of Passion epitomizes callousness of mankind

• Legend circulated throughout Middle Ages, first published in seventeenth century, became figure of Romantic literature in late eighteenth century

Discussion Questions for Odoevsky’s “The Third Night”

• Based on the narrator’s description of his bibliomania and Piranesi’s architectural mania, provide a clinical description of Romantic mania. What are its causes? What are its symptoms?

• What are the origins of Piranesi’s suffering? Are they psychological or social?

• What is the relationship of the philosophical epilogue to the story itself? Is Odoevsky using the story to make a point?

• What does the Carceri d’Invenzione symbolize in this story?

top related