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Haunted museum: longing, travel, and the art-romance tradition

Autor Jonah Siegel

Editorial PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS

Haunted museum: longing, travel, and the art-romance tradition
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  • Publisher PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780691120874
  • ISBN10 0691120870
  • Type Book
  • Pages 285
  • Published 2005
  • Bookbinding Rustic

Haunted museum: longing, travel, and the art-romance tradition

Autor Jonah Siegel

Editorial PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS

-5% disc.    32,16€
30,55€
Save 1,61€
Not available online, but our booksellers can check its availability to give you an estimate of when we might have it ready for you.
Free shipping
Mainland Spain
FREE shipping from €19

to mainland Spain

24/48h shipping

5% discount on all books

FREE pickup at the bookstore

Come and be surprised!

Book Details

For centuries, southern Europe, and Italy in particular, has offered writers far more than an evocative setting for important works of literature. The voyage south has been an integral part of the imagination of inspiration itself. Haunted Museum is a groundbreaking in-depth look at fantasies of Italy from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries, focusing on a literary tradition Jonah Siegel terms the "art romance," the fantastic voyage south understood as the register of an ambivalent desire at once for art and for a heightened experience of reality.

Siegel argues that Italy's allure derives not only from its celebrated promise of unique natural beauty and prized antiquities, but from the opportunity it offers writers to place themselves in relation to a web of prior accounts of travel to the native land of genius. Beginning with Goethe as the founding figure of the tradition, Haunted Museum moves from a rich reframing of literature from the first half of the nineteenth century--including new readings of works by Byron, de Sta--l, Barrett Browning, and others--to an ambitious examination of Henry James's well-known engagement with Europe, newly understood as a response to this important literary legacy. Readings of works by Freud, Forster, Mann, and Proust demonstrate the longevity of the tradition of looking to Italy for the representation of desires as impossible to satisfy as they are to deny.