Prix bas
CHF188.00
Habituellement expédié sous 2 à 4 semaines.
Auteur
Ágnes Zsófia Kovács is Associate Professor at the Department of American Studies, University of Szeged, Hungary. Her research interests include late-nineteenth-century proto-modern fiction, conversions of literary modernisms, popular fiction genres, and contemporary multicultural American fiction. Her current research into travel writing involves remapping travel texts by Edith Wharton. She has published two books, The Function of the Imagination in the Writings of Henry James: The Production of a Civilized Experience (2006) and Literature in Context (2010), co-edited Space, Gender and the Gaze (2017), and edited Edith Wharton's Osprey Notes (2021). She sits on the editorial boards of Americana E-Journal and TNTeF E-Journal, Szeged; and Acta Philologica, Cluj (RO).
Texte du rabat
It focuses on Wharton's symbolic representations of architecture in her travel writings. It shows how allusions to travel writing and art history influenced her representations of spaces. How the shock of the Great War changed Wharton's travel destinations but not her symbolic view of architecture as a mediator of the past.
Résumé
Edith Wharton was not only the author of novels and short stories but also of drama, poetry, autobiography, interior decoration, and travel writing. This study focuses on Wharton's symbolic representations of architecture in her travel writings. It shows how a network of allusions to travel writing and art history books influenced Wharton's representations of architectural and natural spaces. The book demonstrates Wharton's complex relationship to works of art historians (John Ruskin, Émile Mâle, Arthur C. Porter) and travel authors (Wolfgang Goethe, Henry Adams, Henry James) in the trajectory of her travel writing. Kovács surveys how the acknowledgment of Wharton's sources sheds light both on the author's model of aesthetic understanding and scenic architectural descriptions, and how the shock of the Great War changed Wharton's travel destinations but not her symbolic view of architecture as a mediator of things past. Wharton's symbolic representations of architecture provide a new key to her travel writings.
Contenu
Acknowledgements
List of illustrations
Introduction
Influences and editorial interventions
Villas and tradition
Wharton's definition of villa
Renaissance tour
Baroque tour
Villas and art history
Nature and culture in garden architecture
Manners in garden architecture
Writing the history of art and architecture
Sources and book
The seen and the unseen: John Ruskin's Italy
Publication and reception
Wharton's visions of Italy: deconventionalized scenes
Foreground and background
Scenes of observation
Fact and fancy in Wharton's painterly vision
Wharton's backgrounds
Influences, editing and illustrations, contemporary reviews
Historical continuity in space
Continuity in landscape and architecture
Renovations contra ruins
Cathedrals as symbols: a sentimental model of appreciating continuity
The stakes of historical understanding in Wharton
Antecedents, articles to book, early reviews
Visions of war and cultural destruction in Fighting France
The role of art history and propaganda in Wharton's language of war
Composition, publication, contemporary reception
Wharton's Moroccan Orient: history, dreams, women
Facts and dreams of the Moroccan past
Moroccan harems
Wharton's architectural vision in her colonial war reports
Antecedents and publication history: Homer, Goethe, and Ruskin in the typescript
Observing architecture in The Cruise of the Vanadis
Architectural vision in the Osprey Notes
Absence and presence of the past in Athens and Crete
Where the fragments come from: Wharton's readings in art history
St. James's Way: Wharton's Spanish cathedral trail in the Spain Diary, Back to Compostela and A Motor-Flight Through Spain
Architectural vision in A Motor-Flight Through Spain
Conclusion
Index