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The Muse as Eros

Author : Stephen Downes
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 301 pages
File Size : 40,91 MB
Release : 2017-09-29
Category : Music
ISBN : 1351218360

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The Muse has long been figured as a divine or erotically alluring consort to the virile male artist, who may inspire him or lead him to the edge of madness. This book explores the changing cultural expressions of the relationship between the male artist with a beloved, imagined or desired Muse, to offer new and penetrating perspectives on musical representations and transformations of creative masculine subjectivity, and important aspects of the shift from the styles and aesthetics of Romantic Idealism to Modernist Anxiety in music of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Each of the chapters begins with explorations into male artists' relationships with their Muse, and moves to analysis and interpretation which uncovers cultural constructions of masculine artistic inspiration and production, and their association with creatively inspiring and erotically charged relationships with a Muse. New insights are offered into the musical meaning and cultural significance of selected works by Rossini, Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Schumann, Wagner, Sibelius, Mahler, Bartók, Scriabin, Szymanowski, Debussy, Berg, Poulenc and Weill.

Eros Muse

Author : Opal Palmer Adisa
Publisher : Africa Research and Publications
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 36,68 MB
Release : 2006
Category : Caribbean poetry (English)
ISBN : 9781592213986

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An examination of the love affair between the poet and her muse. Personifying the muse as her ultimate, possessive lover, the poet explores what it means to be a writer. Adisa's essays are pragmatic, earthy, exploring the dual tones of mother and writer - her poems are flirtatious, a dance of language and process.

Cultivating the Muse

Author : Ευφροσύνη Σπέντζου
Publisher : Oxford University Press, USA
Page : 340 pages
File Size : 19,46 MB
Release : 2002
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780199240043

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Cultivating the Muse looks beyond the secure and benign images traditionally associated with inspiration in classical literature and scholarship. In contrast to the shapeless collectivity of the Muses in ancient accounts, this collection aspires to redeem their shape in other more vitalforms, closer or more distant incarnations of the ever-elusive maiden. Protagonists -- or victims -- in a complex game of cultural exploration, the alternative Muses and muse-like figures of this book are manipulated, abused, or effaced, but at the same time they also advocate or resist their fatesand explore their own powers of persuasion. Inspiration is here not so much explored in its traditional cultic dimensions, but rather invoked for its capacity to trigger fervent debates about power, desire, knowledge, identity, and gender in the societies of ancient Greece and Rome.

Boccaccio's Naked Muse

Author : Tobias Foster Gittes
Publisher : University of Toronto Press
Page : 385 pages
File Size : 31,33 MB
Release : 2008-01-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0802092047

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Venturing outside the Decameron to the Latin works, and outside the usual textual and intertextual readings of Boccaccio to more broadly cultural and anthropological material, Boccaccio's Naked Muse offers fresh insights on this hugely significant literary figure.

Erotic Muse

Author : Christos Evangeliou
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 18,85 MB
Release : 2015-05-15
Category :
ISBN : 9781942495093

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This collection is comprised of poems that eulogize Eros as a divine entity and refer to love as one of the strongest emotions and passions of the human psyche. The expression of love, considered as an evolved form of the basic creative urge, is polymorphic and multileveled, since it ranges from aesthetic and sexual attraction to psychical connection and spiritual approximation to the ideal of Kalon (Beauty), in accordance with the Platonic paradigm. As a human emotion, love is lived in its fullness between persons who desire to share their lives, their feelings, their thoughts, and their possessions, both material and spiritual, by putting into practice the Pythagorean precept that "friends have everything in common." For this reason, lovers are bound to experience more acutely both the pain of separation and the joy of reunion. The work will be useful for students of Greek literature and thought, but also of interest to all lovers of the good, beautiful and true.

The Poetics of Eros in Ancient Greece

Author : Claude Calame
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 240 pages
File Size : 43,75 MB
Release : 2013-08-18
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0691159432

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The Poetics of Eros in Ancient Greece offers the first comprehensive inquiry into the deity of sexual love, a power that permeated daily Greek life. Avoiding Foucault's philosophical paradigm of dominance/submission, Claude Calame uses an anthropological and linguistic approach to re-create indigenous categories of erotic love. He maintains that Eros, the joyful companion of Aphrodite, was a divine figure around which poets constructed a physiology of desire that functioned in specific ways within a network of social relations. Calame begins by showing how poetry and iconography gave a rich variety of expression to the concept of Eros, then delivers a history of the deity's roles within social and political institutions, and concludes with a discussion of an Eros-centered metaphysics. Calame's treatment of archaic and classical Greek institutions reveals Eros at work in initiation rites and celebrations, educational practices, the Dionysiac theater of tragedy and comedy, and in real and imagined spatial settings. For men, Eros functioned particularly in the symposium and the gymnasium, places where men and boys interacted and where future citizens were educated. The household was the setting where girls, brides, and adult wives learned their erotic roles--as such it provides the context for understanding female rites of passage and the problematics of sexuality in conjugal relations. Through analyses of both Greek language and practices, Calame offers a fresh, subtle reading of relations between individuals as well as a quick-paced and fascinating overview of Eros in Greek society at large.

Eros the Bittersweet

Author : Anne Carson
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 208 pages
File Size : 32,18 MB
Release : 2023-03-14
Category : History
ISBN : 0691249245

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Named one of the 100 best nonfiction books of all time by the Modern Library Anne Carson’s remarkable first book about the paradoxical nature of romantic love Since it was first published, Eros the Bittersweet, Anne Carson’s lyrical meditation on love in ancient Greek literature and philosophy, has established itself as a favorite among an unusually broad audience, including classicists, essayists, poets, and general readers. Beginning with the poet Sappho’s invention of the word “bittersweet” to describe Eros, Carson’s original and beautifully written book is a wide-ranging reflection on the conflicted nature of romantic love, which is both “miserable” and “one of the greatest pleasures we have.”

Machinic Eros

Author : Félix Guattari
Publisher : U of Minnesota Press
Page : 131 pages
File Size : 39,61 MB
Release : 2015-11-01
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 1937561836

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The French philosopher Félix Guattari frequently visited Japan during the 1980s and organized exchanges between French and Japanese artists and intellectuals. His immersion into the “machinic eros” of Japanese culture put him into contact with media theorists such as Tetsuo Kogawa and activists within the mini-FM community (Radio Home Run), documentary filmmakers (Mitsuo Sato), photographers (Keiichi Tahara), novelists (Kobo Abe), internationally recognized architects (Shin Takamatsu), and dancers (Min Tanaka). From pachinko parlors to high-rise highways, alongside corporate suits and among alt-culture comrades, Guattari put himself into the thick of Japanese becomings during a period in which the bubble economy continued to mutate. This collection of essays, interviews, and longer meditations shows a radical thinker exploring the architectural environment of Japan’s “machinic eros.”

The Agony of Eros

Author : Byung-Chul Han
Publisher : MIT Press
Page : 88 pages
File Size : 40,42 MB
Release : 2017-03-31
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 0262339250

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An argument that love requires the courage to accept self-negation for the sake of discovering the Other. Byung-Chul Han is one of the most widely read philosophers in Europe today, a member of the new generation of German thinkers that includes Markus Gabriel and Armen Avanessian. In The Agony of Eros, a bestseller in Germany, Han considers the threat to love and desire in today's society. For Han, love requires the courage to accept self-negation for the sake of discovering the Other. In a world of fetishized individualism and technologically mediated social interaction, it is the Other that is eradicated, not the self. In today's increasingly narcissistic society, we have come to look for love and desire within the “inferno of the same.” Han offers a survey of the threats to Eros, drawing on a wide range of sources—Lars von Trier's film Melancholia, Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, Fifty Shades of Grey, Michel Foucault (providing a scathing critique of Foucault's valorization of power), Martin Buber, Hegel, Baudrillard, Flaubert, Barthes, Plato, and others. Han considers the “pornographication” of society, and shows how pornography profanes eros; addresses capitalism's leveling of essential differences; and discusses the politics of eros in today's “burnout society.” To be dead to love, Han argues, is to be dead to thought itself. Concise in its expression but unsparing in its insight, The Agony of Eros is an important and provocative entry in Han's ongoing analysis of contemporary society. This remarkable essay, an intellectual experience of the first order, affords one of the best ways to gain full awareness of and join in one of the most pressing struggles of the day: the defense, that is to say—as Rimbaud desired it—the “reinvention” of love. —from the foreword by Alain Badiou