An edition of Pushkin and Romantic Fashion (1994)

Pushkin and Romantic Fashion

Fragment, Elegy, Orient, Irony

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Last edited by ImportBot
February 27, 2023 | History
An edition of Pushkin and Romantic Fashion (1994)

Pushkin and Romantic Fashion

Fragment, Elegy, Orient, Irony

  • 0 Ratings
  • 2 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Pushkin and Romantic Fashion is about the interpenetration of culture and personality, specifically Alexander I's Russian Empire, a latecomer in post-Napoleonic European history, and Aleksandr Pushkin, virtuoso improvisor yet prisoner of the Golden Age discourses that now bear his name. It focuses on Pushkin's use of the Romantic fragment, especially the link between the fragment and Romantic irony's fundamental and modern questioning of the sources and intentionality of language.

In the view of such irony's most eloquent formulator, Friedrich Schlegel, "identity" does not precede speech, but is forged in each improvisational interaction with interlocutor or reader. One finds out who one is by speaking, and all utterances and texts stand in a fragmentary, contingent relation to an accumulating life-text.

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Pushkin may actually come closest of all major European poets to realizing what Schlegel prescribed, or diagnosed, as the poetics of modernity, not because of any direct links, but because as common latecomers on the European cultural scene, Russian and German writers shared a fascination with European fashions and an ironic talent for conflating or stepping outside them.

Thus Pushkin's kaleidoscopic explorations of fashionable European genres, from "Augustan" erotic elegy to the archaic Greek lyric fragment, from the Byronic Oriental poetic tale to Shakespearean chronicle drama, from the modern "society tale" to the Walter Scott historical novel, can be seen as ever more dramatic rewritings of and meditations on a previous life-text.

This fragmentary and ironic self-presentation has ensured that every generation of Pushkin readers, no matter how gilded with cultural authority the poet became, "talked back.".

The author is deeply concerned to embed Pushkin in a larger European context in a way critically consonant with the best in Western Romantic studies. She locates Pushkin's penchant for fragmentary structures in a European discourse of fragmentation, revealing Romantic expression to be not a set of cliches, but an array of fresh opportunities for articulating the ongoing drama of individuation, particularly where no native tradition of individualism existed.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
428

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Pushkin and Romantic Fashion
Pushkin and Romantic Fashion: Fragment, Elegy, Orient, Irony
January 1, 1997, Stanford University Press
Paperback in English
Cover of: Pushkin and romantic fashion
Pushkin and romantic fashion: fragment, elegy, Orient, irony
1994, Stanford University Press
in English

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Book Details


The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Number of pages
428
Dimensions
8.6 x 5.6 x 0.9 inches
Weight
1.1 pounds

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL7928996M
ISBN 10
0804727996
ISBN 13
9780804727990
Goodreads
1032223

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
February 27, 2023 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
August 23, 2020 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
April 24, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Fixed duplicate goodreads IDs.
April 16, 2010 Edited by bgimpertBot Added goodreads ID.
April 29, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from amazon.com record