The decadent republic of letters : taste, politics, and cosmopolitan community from Baudelaire to Beardsley

Bibliographic Information

The decadent republic of letters : taste, politics, and cosmopolitan community from Baudelaire to Beardsley

Matthew Potolsky

(Haney Foundation series)

University of Pennsylvania Press, c2013

  • : hardcover

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Note

Bibliography: p. [205]-224

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

While scholars have long associated the group of nineteenth-century French and English writers and artists known as the decadents with alienation, escapism, and withdrawal from the social and political world, Matthew Potolsky offers an alternative reading of the movement. In The Decadent Republic of Letters, he treats the decadents as fundamentally international, defined by a radically cosmopolitan ideal of literary sociability rather than an inward turn toward private aesthetics and exotic sensation. The Decadent Republic of Letters looks at the way Charles Baudelaire, Theophile Gautier, and Algernon Charles Swinburne used the language of classical republican political theory to define beauty as a form of civic virtue. The libertines, an international underground united by subversive erudition, gave decadents a model of countercultural affiliation and a vocabulary for criticizing national canon formation and the increasing state control of education. Decadent figures such as Joris-Karl Huysmans, Walter Pater, Vernon Lee, Aubrey Beardsley, and Oscar Wilde envisioned communities formed through the circulation of art. Decadents lavishly praised their counterparts from other traditions, translated and imitated their works, and imagined the possibility of new associations forged through shared tastes and texts. Defined by artistic values rather than language, geography, or ethnic identity, these groups anticipated forms of attachment that are now familiar in youth countercultures and on social networking sites. Bold and sophisticated, The Decadent Republic of Letters unearths a pervasive decadent critique of nineteenth-century notions of political community and reveals the collective effort by the major figures of the movement to find alternatives to liberalism and nationalism.

Table of Contents

Introduction. "Workers of the Final Hour" Chapter 1. "Partisans Inconnus": Aesthetic Community and the Public Good in Baudelaire Chapter 2. The Politics of Appreciation: Gautier and Swinburne on Baudelaire Chapter 3. Golden Books: Pater, Huysmans, and Decadent Canonization Chapter 4. A Mirror for Teachers: Decadent Pedagogy and Public Education Chapter 5. A Republic of (Nothing but) Letters: Some Versions of Decadent Community Postscript. Public Works: Stephane Mallarme's "Le Tombeau de Charles Baudelaire" Notes Bibliography Index Acknowledgments

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