Divagations

Author(s): Stephane Mallarme

Philosophy, Politics & Current Affairs

'This is a book just the way I don't like them', the father of French Symbolism, Stephane Mallarme, informs the reader in his preface to "Divagations": 'scattered and with no architecture'. On the heels of this caveat, Mallarme's diverting, discursive, and gorgeously disordered 1897 masterpiece tumbles forth - and proves itself to be just the sort of book his readers like most.

$39.95 AUD

Stock: 0


Add to Wishlist


Product Information

For Mallarme, poetry is more than words on a page; it is at the center of what it means to be human. An appreciation of music, painting, and poetry is inextricably interwoven with his comments on the works of German composer Richard Wagner and French painter Edouard Manet. Mallarme's writings are in a dense, rich, hypnotic prose. -- Anthony Pucci Library Journal 20070301 [A] lustrous new English translation...[A] remarkable book [and a] wise translator...I don't know whether I've expressed excitedly or lucidly enough my sense of this translation's importance. -- Wayne Koestenbaum Bookforum 20070401 Johnson is among the world's foremost Mallarme scholars, and this translation of "the author's 1897 arrangement" of this work, "together with 'Autobiography' and 'Music and Letters,'" is an unequivocal tour de force. Mallarme's French echoes through and the English sounds authentic and coherent. But the fact that this translation is Johnson's reading of Mallarme is its chief value. And this is why Mallarme scholars who read Mallarme in French will look at it and why scholars of comparable periods in English-language literatures and performance arts will consult it for Mallarme's commentaries. In addition, Johnson's rendering of Mallarme's voice will undoubtedly interest translation theorists. Surely this is the way Mallarme must have sounded to the English speakers intermittently translating what he was saying as he held forth at his Tuesday evening receptions: witty and insightful, to be sure, but sometimes pretentious and fatuous. -- M. Gaddis Rose Choice 20071101 Reading Divagations today, we see how resonantly [Mallarme's] world rhymes with ours: inequality, sleaze, financial crashes, terrorism and state repression, along with an acute sense of the spectacular nature of modern life, its commodity-fetishism and materialism, its paradoxes of plenitude and emptiness. Key to Mallarme's thinking is his refusal of those two great late-nineteenth-century paradigms, those mutually stabilizing opposites: Progress and Decline. He enjoys the democratization of luxury and beauty brought about by mass production, and does not denounce the glitter of fancy goods and their ephemeral pleasures. Nor does he "buy into" the belief that capital will always right itself or that science and technology guarantee social progress...Barbara Johnson has accomplished an exemplary work of translation, not just by making this important book available to non-French readers, but by carrying off Mallarme's uniquely eccentric prose style without flattening or straightening it out...Where Mallarme's poems strip away all that is not poetry, his prose brings it back into the fold, incorporates and recycles it. Recycling being the pragmatist's alchemy, and Mallarme being more of a pragmatist than we allow, Divagations can be read as the great recycling project that balances out the alchemy of his poetry. -- Patrick McGuinness Times Literary Supplement 20090619

Barbara Johnson taught in the departments of English and Comparative Literature at Harvard University and was the Frederic Wertham Professor of Law and Psychiatry in Society. She is the author of The Critical Difference, A World of Difference, and The Wake of Deconstruction.

General Fields

  • : 9780674032408
  • : Harvard University Press
  • : The Belknap Press
  • : 0.34
  • : 02 April 2009
  • : 202mm X 130mm X 23mm
  • : United States
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Stephane Mallarme
  • : Paperback
  • : 848.808
  • : 312