GAMIANI, OR TWO NIGHTS OF EXCESS BY ALFRED DE MUSSET: CONSTRUCTION OF SUBJECTIVITY IN FRENCH “BLACK”

This essay examines Gamiani, or Two Nights of Excess, erotic novel by Alfred de Musset This essay examines Gamiani, or Two Nights of Excess, erotic novel by Alfred de Musset written at the beginning of the 1830s and widely popular in France until up to the 1920s. When writing the novel that b...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andrey V. Golubkov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2017-06-01
Series:Studia Litterarum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studlit.ru/images/2017-2-2/Golubkov.pdf
Description
Summary:This essay examines Gamiani, or Two Nights of Excess, erotic novel by Alfred de Musset This essay examines Gamiani, or Two Nights of Excess, erotic novel by Alfred de Musset written at the beginning of the 1830s and widely popular in France until up to the 1920s. When writing the novel that belongs to the tradition of “black Romanticism,” de Musset was heavily drawing on the French tradition of libertinage, de Sade’s work in particular. However, he substantially revised and transformed its aesthetical and philosophical premises. The novel describing various sexual perversities of the main character, Gamiani, adheres to the aesthetical principles of Romanticism that cultivated geniality but also marginality seen as the symptom of exceptionalism. The character’s lesbian affairs may be interpreted in terms of the urge for the infinite lust, or Romantic “abyss.” These motifs became developed in Baudelaire’s The Flowers of Evil, especially in the poem “Lesbians.”
ISSN:2500-4247
2541-8564