Description

This study of Marcel Proust’s creative imagination examines an aspect of the novel that has hitherto been largely overlooked: the author’s dependence on secondary visual sources. Proust made constant use of reproductions – photographs, engravings, postcards, illustrations in books – as sources of reference and as narrative devices in their own right. Furthermore, he consistently chose to use reproductions in preference to originals, whether people, places or works of art. Bringing together for the first time a mass of factual information documenting Proust’s use of second-hand images, the author argues that reproductions play a key role in the work’s complex, multi-layered structure. Rather than being hampered by their limitations, Proust took advantage of their distancing effect to free his imagination and to insert new layers of meaning into his narrative.

Proust’s Imaginary Museum: Reproductions and Reproduction in "À la recherche du temps perdu"

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Paperback / softback by J. Barrie Bullen , Gabrielle Townsend

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This study of Marcel Proust’s creative imagination examines an aspect of the novel that has hitherto been largely overlooked: the... Read more

    Publisher: Verlag Peter Lang
    Publication Date: 23/04/2008
    ISBN13: 9783039111244, 978-3039111244
    ISBN10: 3039111248

    Number of Pages: 234

    Non Fiction , ELT & Literary Studies , Education

    Description

    This study of Marcel Proust’s creative imagination examines an aspect of the novel that has hitherto been largely overlooked: the author’s dependence on secondary visual sources. Proust made constant use of reproductions – photographs, engravings, postcards, illustrations in books – as sources of reference and as narrative devices in their own right. Furthermore, he consistently chose to use reproductions in preference to originals, whether people, places or works of art. Bringing together for the first time a mass of factual information documenting Proust’s use of second-hand images, the author argues that reproductions play a key role in the work’s complex, multi-layered structure. Rather than being hampered by their limitations, Proust took advantage of their distancing effect to free his imagination and to insert new layers of meaning into his narrative.

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