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dc.contributor.authorMahler, Andreas
dc.date.accessioned2021-02-19T10:31:15Z
dc.date.available2021-02-19T10:31:15Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.identifier.issn2571-452X
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/124498
dc.language.isoencs_CZ
dc.publisherUniverzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultacs_CZ
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/
dc.sourceLitteraria Pragensia, 2020, 60, 12-32cs_CZ
dc.source.urihttp://litteraria-pragensia.ff.cuni.cz
dc.subjectperformative literaturecs_CZ
dc.subjectmodern artcs_CZ
dc.subjectDinggedichtcs_CZ
dc.subjecttextualitycs_CZ
dc.titlePerforming objects: On the verbal making of thingscs_CZ
dc.typeVědecký článekcs_CZ
uk.abstract.enThe nineteenth century witnesses a slow and surreptitious shift from a mimetic conception of literature to its performative conception. Especially around 1850, artists seem to become less and less interested in expressing something in literature rather than in creating something as literature. It is precisely this move from (mimetic) world-making to (performative) text-making that turns the artist into a “modern” artist (Baudelaire), liberating him/her from the constraints of ‘reality’ and endowing him/her with the options of exploring art’s medialities. The article proceeds from what is called the “thing-poem” (Dinggedicht), trying to show its twofold nature ‒ both as an artefact depicting an object and as a composition making one. Then it moves backward to explore the constructive mechanisms of textuality with regard to the Parnassian movement (and even John Keats’s poetry), as well as forward to show how later generations engage with ‘things’ not so much in order to represent but rather to present them. Finally, a similar development is traced in narratives, which develop from the mimeticism of descriptions to the foregrounding of the performative qualities of prose. This, however, includes a much greater risk of falling prey to the recuperating attempts to reintegrate the text-making into a conventionalized mimetic reading, expecting, and finding, a fragmented and contingent, ‘absurd’ world.cs_CZ
dc.publisher.publicationPlacePrahacs_CZ
uk.internal-typeuk_publication
dc.description.startPage12
dc.description.endPage32
dcterms.isPartOf.nameLitteraria Pragensiacs_CZ
dcterms.isPartOf.journalYear2020
dcterms.isPartOf.journalVolume2020
dcterms.isPartOf.journalIssue60


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