Imagination and reality

To Wallace Stevens the artist is determined by his relation to the "pressure of reality." When the artist erases or evades the pressure reality is absorbed by the imagination so that the interdependence between reality and imagination is aesthetically metamorphosed by a process of abstract...

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Main Author: Jørgen Veisland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tankebanen forlag 2020-01-01
Series:Inscriptions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tankebanen.no/inscriptions/index.php/inscriptions/article/view/51
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spelling doaj-5eaf1fbbcbbf4f779905ed26f751cf722021-02-21T21:34:32ZengTankebanen forlagInscriptions2535-79482535-54302020-01-013130Imagination and realityJørgen VeislandTo Wallace Stevens the artist is determined by his relation to the "pressure of reality." When the artist erases or evades the pressure reality is absorbed by the imagination so that the interdependence between reality and imagination is aesthetically metamorphosed by a process of abstraction, and the artist's power is measured by his ability to abstract himself and to withdraw reality with him into his abstraction. Here, Stevens has formulated nothing less than a poetics of abstraction. In this essay the significance of his poetics will be examined by applying it to modernist fiction, embarking from a reading by Stevens' own poem "The Snow Man” (1921), where the aural sense, listening, prevents and excludes a fanciful attachment to the unreal and allows for the interdependence and the merging of imagination and reality, a poetic abstraction that is embedded in nature itself. In Alain Robbe-Grillet's novel Jealousy (1957), Haruki Murakami's short story "TV People” (1993), and Paul Auster's novel 4321 (2017) we find a problematising, even a denigration of vision as the characters are drawn to petrified images that obviate perception and insight. Bruno Schulz' novella "Cinnamon Shops” (1934) forms an exception in that the experience of illumination and expansion, taking place in winter, is precipitated by a unifying of the senses, aural, visual and tactile. The first-person narrator abstracts himself and abstracts reality by placing it in the imagination, to use Stevens' phrase.https://www.tankebanen.no/inscriptions/index.php/inscriptions/article/view/51abstractionontological congruityimagination and realitypossible poet
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jørgen Veisland
spellingShingle Jørgen Veisland
Imagination and reality
Inscriptions
abstraction
ontological congruity
imagination and reality
possible poet
author_facet Jørgen Veisland
author_sort Jørgen Veisland
title Imagination and reality
title_short Imagination and reality
title_full Imagination and reality
title_fullStr Imagination and reality
title_full_unstemmed Imagination and reality
title_sort imagination and reality
publisher Tankebanen forlag
series Inscriptions
issn 2535-7948
2535-5430
publishDate 2020-01-01
description To Wallace Stevens the artist is determined by his relation to the "pressure of reality." When the artist erases or evades the pressure reality is absorbed by the imagination so that the interdependence between reality and imagination is aesthetically metamorphosed by a process of abstraction, and the artist's power is measured by his ability to abstract himself and to withdraw reality with him into his abstraction. Here, Stevens has formulated nothing less than a poetics of abstraction. In this essay the significance of his poetics will be examined by applying it to modernist fiction, embarking from a reading by Stevens' own poem "The Snow Man” (1921), where the aural sense, listening, prevents and excludes a fanciful attachment to the unreal and allows for the interdependence and the merging of imagination and reality, a poetic abstraction that is embedded in nature itself. In Alain Robbe-Grillet's novel Jealousy (1957), Haruki Murakami's short story "TV People” (1993), and Paul Auster's novel 4321 (2017) we find a problematising, even a denigration of vision as the characters are drawn to petrified images that obviate perception and insight. Bruno Schulz' novella "Cinnamon Shops” (1934) forms an exception in that the experience of illumination and expansion, taking place in winter, is precipitated by a unifying of the senses, aural, visual and tactile. The first-person narrator abstracts himself and abstracts reality by placing it in the imagination, to use Stevens' phrase.
topic abstraction
ontological congruity
imagination and reality
possible poet
url https://www.tankebanen.no/inscriptions/index.php/inscriptions/article/view/51
work_keys_str_mv AT jørgenveisland imaginationandreality
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