Spoiled Distinctions - Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism by Hannah Freed-Thall
At a Glance
Section titled āAt a Glanceā| Metadata | Details |
|---|---|
| Publication Date | 2021-01-01 |
| Journal | The Modern Language Review |
| Authors | Ian Ellison |
Abstract
Section titled āAbstractāļļļ Reviews critical incidentā (p. ļļ), on the other. Lloyd prefers āBoule de suifā to āLa Parureā, praising the formerās complexity of character portraits and downplaying the eponymous prostituteās victimhood. ī¢e latter he calls āa rather unedifying lesson about social pretensions and self-deceptionā (p. ļļļ). Meanwhile, Maupassantās fantastic ļ¬ction is examined in the light of his ļļļļ essay āLe Fantastiqueā on the genre; both the ļ¬ction and the essay stress the dissolution of the self rather than the supernatural itself. A brief reading of āLe Horlaā shows this emphasis in action. Maupassantās novels are read through the familiar lens of contraction as we move chronologically from Une vie to Notre cÅur. Lloyd does not dispute the consensus that the authorās ļ¬nal two novels are inferior to their predecessors, despite glimmers of proto-Proustianism in the latter; yet, unlike most critics, he is also severe in commenting on Pierre et Jean, accusing Maupassantās narrative voice of losing objectivity and unduly siding with the protagonist. Mont-Oriol, in contrast, has been unfairly overlooked; it has a ābalanced outcomeā (p. ļļļ) that reļ¬ects its interweaving of transactional business and romantic dealings. It is hard to imagine a more comprehensive treatment of Maupassant in this format. To the experienced reader, little of this material will be new, yet that is not the function of this book or indeed of the series as a whole. Lloyd expertly condenses a maximum of content, about both Maupassantās own writing and the responses it has elicited, into around two hundred pages. As a result, Guy de Maupassant will no doubt serve as both a helpful teaching aid and an introduction to Maupassant for interested amateurs for years to come. Vļ©ļ¬ļ¬ļ”ļ®ļÆļ¶ļ” Uļ®ļ©ļ¶ļ„ļ²ļ³ļ©ļ“ļ¹ RļÆļ¤ļ„ļ²ļ©ļ£ļ« CļÆļÆļ«ļ„ Spoiled Distinctions: Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism. By Hļ”ļ®- ļ®ļ”ļØ Fļ²ļ„ļ„ļ¤-TļØļ”ļ¬ļ¬. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ļ ļļļ (pbk ļ ļļļ). viii+ ļ ļļ pp. Ā£ļļ.ļļ (pbk Ā£ļ ļ.ļļ). ISBN ļļļ-ļ-ļļļļ ļ-ļļļ -ļ (pbk ļļļ-ļ-ļļļļļ- ļļļ-ļ). In a rare instance of incoherence, the narrator of Proustās Recherche expresses his ļ¬rst aesthetic judgement as a spluttered string of outbursts. Encountering an everyday scene of a splotch of light reļ¬ected between a pond and a chicken-topped tool-shed roof, he is so delighted that he can only brandish his umbrella and exclaim āZut, zut, zut, zutā. For Hannah Freed-ī¢all, this unsophisticated moment of aesthetic experience and disorientation unlocks the apparent contradiction in French modernism between high style and inarticulacy. By examining what she evocatively terms ābeautyās aīerlivesā, Freed-ī¢all seeks to prove that āthe aesthetic is nothing specialā (p. ļļ). Her book comprises two parts, the ļ¬rst of which theorizes an underexplored aesthetics of ordinariness in Proustās novel via ideas of prestige, babble, and nuance, while the second oļ¬ers a survey of post-Proust literature, examining mid-century experimental aesthetic encounters in the prose poetry of Francis Ponge, the novels of Nathalie Sarraute, and the contemporary theatre of Yasmina Reza. Concisely erudite and clearly MLR, ļļļ.ļ, ļ ļļ ļ ļļļ written, Spoiled Distinctions marshals an impressive range of secondary literature from Immanuel Kant to Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick in its exploration of the ordinary from the vantage point of aesthetic theory. In the ļ¬rst half of her monograph, Freed-ī¢all argues that moments of ineloquent astonishment allow the Proustian beholder to enjoy āthe world in its common, undigniļ¬ed singularity, rather than as a mineable source of secret treasureā (p. ļļ). She then turns her attention to authors who have expanded Proustās minor mode of spoiled distinction such that it becomes the entire substance of aesthetic experience in their work. In elaborating new ways to delineate and parcel up the phenomenal world, Spoiled Distinctions argues that French modernism ādoes not simply reinforce the high-low, distinguished-vulgar codes of taste, but makes us aware of the classiļ¬cation-thwarting margins of both aesthetic experience and literary critiqueā (p. ļ ļ) Ultimately, for Freed-ī¢all, the aesthetic in French modernism is bound up with all it purportedly eschews: āquotidian commodity consumption; the labour of making and perceiving; and the vulnerable ļ¬nite body, with its unruly pleasures and displeasuresā (p. ļļļ). Each chapter oļ¬ers perceptive close readings of scenes of beholding. ī¢e ļ¬rst focuses on Proustās early pastiche accounts of a diamond theī in the style ofā¦