W. G. SEBALD: THE PLEASURE AND PAIN OF BEAUTY
Beauty plays a central but ambivalent role in Sebald's writings. Echoing Kant's aesthetic theory, Sebald's texts emphasise the disinterested and free nature of aesthetic pleasure, but they also argue that this pleasure is increasingly threatened in the modern age, as the human relatio...
Main Author: | Duttlinger, C |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2009
|
Similar Items
-
Memory, Place and Pain in W.G. Sebald's: The Emigrants
by: Kobi (Yaaqov) Assoulin
Published: (2021-04-01) -
W.G. Sebald. Campo Santo
by: Jean VIVIÈS
Published: (2008-10-01) -
Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The Emigrants
by: Chandan Kumar Panda
Published: (2022-06-01) -
The Ruin as Kairos in W. G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn
by: Anne-Laure Fortin-Tournès
Published: (2012-12-01) -
The Politics of Space and Heterotopia in the Works of W. G. Sebald
by: Richa Gupta
Published: (2019-12-01)