1st Edition

The Ideal Reader Proust, Freud, and the Reconstruction of European Culture

Edited By Jacques Riviere Copyright 1960
    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    Jacques Riviere knew how to accept art emotionally. No French critic was ever less a traditional pedagogue. Rivibre was an intelligent French writer, who knew that the summit of the intellect is to admit aff ective knowledge, instinct, and intuition. The "heart," or taste, is always superior to raw intelligence.

    Reviere's supple metaphors are not easily rendered into English. Th e density of his thought, the complexity of his views, the moral and spiritual fervor that vibrates in these pages, further enhances the difficulties the skilled translator must overcome. Literary criticism is often ephemeral; it has served its purpose if it stimulates discussion about the work of art under scrutiny. Not so with essays like these. Th ey demand an active reading, as do the original works themselves. Th ey do not easily yield their signifi cance.

    Among the critics who came into the French literary scene in the years immediately preceding and following the First World War, Jacques Riviere has been least affected by the attrition of time. His studies of Proust and Rimbaud still rank among the two or three essential works to be read on these authors. Few other critics have gone further in a sensuous perception of these authors' work and the intellectual lucidity in analyzing it. Reviere had few pretensions to profundity and a great purity of style. In an age of slogans and judgments, this volume reminds the reader of the extraordinary role of European critical thought in the twentieth century.

    1: Perception of New Trends; Foreword; Concerning Sincerity; The Adventure Novel; ‘Le Sacre du Printemps”; 2: Proust and Freud; Foreword; The Goncourt Prize; Marcel Proust and the Classical Tradition; Marcel Proust and the Positivist Mind; The Three Main Theses of Psychoanalysis; A New Orientation of Psychology; 3: In Defense of Literature; Foreword; Concerning a Book on Aesthetics; In Defense of Intelligence; “Belphégor”; Gratitude to Dada; On Dostoevsky and the Creation of Character; “Le Bal du Comte d’Or gel”; An Open Letter to Henri Massis on Good and Bad Sentiments; 4: Summary; French Letters and the War

    Biography

    Jacques Riviere