scholarly journals Barrés y Maurras, lectores de Baudelaire:

2020 ◽  
pp. 74-119
Author(s):  
Mariano Sverdloff

La herencia baudelaireana -entendida no solamente como la lectura de la obra y la figura del autor de Les fleurs du mal, sino también como sus efectos sobre las nuevas gene-raciones literarias y sobre la vida cultural en sentido amplio- es un tópico recurrente en las reflexiones en torno a la literatura tanto de Maurice Barrès como de Charles Maurras. Para estas figuras fundacionales del nacionalismo francés, Baudelaire constituye la expresión de un «romanticismo» estre-chamente ligado con la «enferme-dad» y la «decadencia» propias de la modernidad, que demanda, sin embar-go, posicionamientos diversos, casi opuestos. Baudelaire es mucho más que una referencia literaria, y se convierte en la cifra o contraseña que dispara toda una serie de considera-ciones en torno al clasicismo, el romanticismo, la autonomía literaria, la oposición nacionalismo / cosmopo-litismo, el futuro de Europa, la integridad del «yo» y la valoración de las tradiciones antigua y moderna.

1963 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-24
Author(s):  
C. A. Burns
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 170-182
Author(s):  
Karen F. Quandt

Baudelaire refers in his first essay on Théophile Gautier (1859) to the ‘fraîcheurs enchanteresses’ and ‘profondeurs fuyantes’ yielded by the medium of watercolour, which invites a reading of his unearthing of a romantic Gautier as a prescription for the ‘watercolouring’ of his own lyric. If Paris's environment was tinted black as a spiking population and industrial zeal made their marks on the metropolis, Baudelaire's washing over of the urban landscape allowed vivid colours to bleed through the ‘fange’. In his early urban poems from Albertus (1832), Gautier's overall tint of an ethereal atmosphere as well as absorption of chaos and din into a lulling, muted harmony establish the balmy ‘mise en scène’ that Baudelaire produces at the outset of the ‘Tableaux parisiens’ (Les Fleurs du mal, 1861). With a reading of Baudelaire's ‘Tableaux parisiens’ as at once a response and departure from Gautier, or a meeting point where nostalgia ironically informs an avant-garde poetics, I show in this paper how Baudelaire's luminescent and fluid traces of color in his urban poems, no matter how washed or pale, vividly resist the inky plumes of the Second Empire.


2016 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 263-279
Author(s):  
Robert J. Hudson ◽  
Kristen Foote

In one of the lesser-studied sections of Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal, ‘Le Vin’, the poet offers a key to understanding the transcendence necessary for common post-Revolution Parisians to attain the proper poetic inspiration to create elevated verse. Divine or poetic Fury, a theoretically more robust version of other nineteenth-century ideas of intoxication, is at the heart of the section's threshold poem, ‘L'Âme du vin’, and establishes a bridge in Les Fleurs du mal linking the modern terrestrial wanderings of the ‘Tableaux parisiens’ to the celestial flights of the ‘Fleurs du mal’. Developed from Plato's Ion and Gallically codified by Rabelais, these theories filter to the aesthete Baudelaire, who decants this aged wine into a nineteenth-century vessel that lays old regime vertical hierarchies on their side and offers poetic intoxication to all who are willing to labour to become vessels of inspiration themselves.


2016 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 537-558
Author(s):  
Olivér Kovács

This paper offers some ammunition to better understand Hungary’s position in the IMD World Talent Report 2015 (IMD WTR 2015). First, it gives a brief overview of the methodology of the IMD WTR by highlighting its main features. Second, it presents the 2015 ranking and puts the focus on Hungary’s withering talent competitiveness. The paper conveys the message that an overarching and consistent reform package is a must in the education system to foster talent utilisation. However, such a package is likely to be insufficient unless economic policy addresses the relevant shortcomings of the Hungarian innovation ecosystem.


1989 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-22
Author(s):  
Marie-Hélène Prat
Keyword(s):  

1989 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-43
Author(s):  
Marie-Hélène Prat
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Chantal Jaquet
Keyword(s):  

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content: "Souvent, l’art des parfums emprunte ses images, voire ses concepts à la musique pour exprimer sa temporalité évanescente et invisible. La création de parfums se présente comme une composition rythmée de notes olfactives : notes de tête, plus légères et volatiles, à la manière de croches aromatiques, comme les agrumes ou les menthes ; notes de cœur, florales et épicées, de plus longue durée ; notes de fond, plus lourdes et persistantes, comme un refrain musqué ou boisé. Faute d’un vocabulaire olfactif riche et développé, la description des fragrances puise elle aussi ses expressions dans un registre musical et s’appuie sur des analogies et des correspondances poétiques nourries par le symbolisme de Baudelaire. L’auteur des Fleurs du mal n’hésite pas à parler de parfums « doux comme les hautbois1 » et à mêler les « parfums des verts tamariniers » au chant des mariniers. » Dans La chevelure, son esprit qui se baigne dans cette forêt aromatique répond à ceux qui « voguent sur la musique »."


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