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The Drowned Muse - Anne-Gaëlle Saliot

The Drowned Muse

Casting the Unknown Woman of the Seine Across the Tides of Modernity
Buch | Hardcover
390 Seiten
2015
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-870862-9 (ISBN)
CHF 229,00 inkl. MwSt
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The Drowned Muse charts the trajectory of representations of "L'Inconnue de la Seine" in literature and the visual arts since the late 1890s and shows how the mask's metamorphoses track across the years provides points of negotiation through which to better understand modernity.
The Drowned Muse is a study of the extraordinary destiny, in the history of European culture, of an object which could seem, at first glance, quite ordinary in the history of European culture. It tells the story of a mask, the cast of a young girl's face entitled "L'Inconnue de la Seine," the Unknown Woman of the Seine, and its subsequent metamorphoses as a cultural figure. Legend has it that the "Inconnue" drowned herself in Paris at the end of the nineteenth century. The forensic scientist tending to her unidentified corpse at the Paris Morgue was supposedly so struck by her allure that he captured in plaster the contours of her face. This unknown girl, also referred to as "The Mona Lisa of Suicide", has since become the object of an obsessive interest that started in the late 1890s, reached its peak in the 1930s, and continues to reverberate today.

Aby Warburg defines art history as "a ghost story for grown-ups." This study is similarly "a ghost story for grown-ups", narrating the aura of a cultural object that crosses temporal, geographical, and linguistic frontiers. It views the "Inconnue" as a symptomatic expression of a modern world haunted by the earlier modernity of the nineteenth century. It investigates how the mask's metamorphoses reflect major shifts in the cultural history of the last two centuries, approaching the "Inconnue" as an entry point to understand a phenomenon characteristic of 20th- and 21st-century modernity: the translatability of media. Doing so, this study mobilizes discourses surrounding the "Inconnue", casting them as points of negotiation through which we may consider the modern age.

Anne-Gaëlle Saliot is Assistant Professor at Duke University, where she teaches twentieth-century French literature and cinema. In 2011, she was awarded the Mellon Fellowship for her manuscript on the legacies of literature and on visual representations of the "unknown woman of the Seine." Her additional research interests include French theory of the image (Maurice Blanchot, Jacques Rancière), literature and dance, film studies, and more especially the connections between filmmakers of the New Wave and the nineteenth century.

I. DEATH AND THE MAIDEN; II. THE DEAD WOMAN AND THE PALIMPSEST OF THE CITY; III TRACES OF A METAMORPHOSIS: POPULAR IMAGERY, PHOTOGRAPHY, CINEMA AND THEORY; APPENDICES

Erscheint lt. Verlag 10.9.2015
Reihe/Serie Oxford Modern Languages and Literature Monographs
Zusatzinfo Numerous black-and-white halftones
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 148 x 220 mm
Gewicht 630 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Kunstgeschichte / Kunststile
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
ISBN-10 0-19-870862-9 / 0198708629
ISBN-13 978-0-19-870862-9 / 9780198708629
Zustand Neuware
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