In this examination of the role of ornament in
nineteenth-century French literature, Rae Beth Gordon shows that
ornament, far from being a simple accessory, raises problems that
are at the very heart of aesthetic experience: limits and their
transgression, illusion and seduction, pleasure and tension,
harmony and confusion, excess and marginality. After placing texts
by Nerval, Gautier, Mallarm, Huysmans, and Rachilde within the
context of the history and techniques of the decorative arts, she
reveals in these works the powerful role played by decorative
figurations of syntax, diction, and composition. Gordon's detailed
textual analyses yield spatial parallels with specific ornamental
configurations (interlace, arabesque, decorative frame, horror
vacui, trompe l'oeil). These patterns are then studied in relation
to a dynamics of desire. Ornament, taken as the site of desire and
illuminated by the theories of Charcot, Clrambault, Freud,
Winnicott, and Lacan, highlights important differences between
romanticism, symbolism, and decadence. Not only does the author
relate ornament to artistic representations of the sublime, the
grotesque, and hysteria, but she also reveals that the function of
ornament in literature anticipated psychiatric and aesthetic
research on decorative form in the fin de sicle.
Originally published in 1992.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
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