The history of decadent culture runs from ancient Rome to nineteenth-century Paris, Victorian London, fin de siecle Vienna, Weimar Berlin, and beyond. The decline of Rome provides the pattern for both aesthetic and social decadence, a pattern that artists and writers in the nineteenth century imitated, emulated, parodied, and otherwise manipulated for aesthetic gain. What begins as the moral condemnation of modernity in mid-nineteenth century France on the part of decadent authors such as Charles Baudelaire ends up as the perverse celebration of the pessimism that accompanies imperial decline. This delight in decline informs the rich canon of decadence that runs from Joris-Karl Huysmans's A Rebours to Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, Aubrey Beardsley's drawings, Gustav Klimt's paintings, and numerous other works. In this Very Short Introduction, David Weir explores the conflicting attitudes towards modernity present in decadent culture by examining the difference between aesthetic decadence--the excess of artifice--and social decadence, which involves excess in a variety of forms, whether perversely pleasurable or gratuitously cruel. Such contrariness between aesthetic and social decadence led some of its practitioners to substitute art for life and to stress the importance of taste over morality, a maneuver with far-reaching consequences, especially as decadence enters the realm of popular culture today. ABOUT THE SERIES: The Very Short Introductions series from Oxford University Press contains hundreds of titles in almost every subject area. These pocket-sized books are the perfect way to get ahead in a new subject quickly. Our expert authors combine facts, analysis, perspective, new ideas, and enthusiasm to make interesting and challenging topics highly readable.
A full-color cookbook from the blogger and self-taught baker behind the popular website JoytheBaker.com presents 125 deliciously decadent recipes for cookies, cakes, pies, crumbles, cobblers, ice cream and brunch dishes. 40,000 first ...
They challenged the distinction between art and craft that separated fibre art and fine art.” Bradley Quinn, “Textiles at the Cutting Edge,” in Monem (ed.), Contemporary Textiles: The Fabric of Fine Art, 15. See also Anthea Callen, ...
The Decadent Society explains what happens when a rich and powerful society ceases advancing—how the combination of wealth and technological proficiency with economic stagnation, political stalemates, cultural exhaustion, and demographic ...
This collection brings together 20 short stories of the "fin-de-siecle" and includes such writers as George Egerton, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Vernon Lee, Ada Leverson and Olive Schreiner.
The brilliant cast of characters that parades through this book includes Oscar Wilde, Charles Baudelaire, J.-K. Huysmans, Walter Pater, and Paul Verlaine. Art for these writers was a mystical and erotic experience.
In a well-known essay, Lawrence Kramer grounds an interpretation of Elektra in an analysis of the fin-de-sie`cle 'culture of supremacism' – the separation of 'high' and 'low' through obsessive, highly refined, yet brutal systems of ...
When Gibbons père died in 1867, Stanley sold up and became a full-time stamp dealer, having issued a price list – the embryonic catalogue – from 1864. In 1874 he relocated to Gower Street in London, and his enterprise grew.
phenomenon, decadence offered paradigms that were at once cosmopolitan, transnational, and global (Hall and Murray 2013, 18). The fluctuating contours of the movement defined as decadent have been redrawn in more recent studies by David ...
Eisner does not see Opolský as a Decadent but as a detached observer of reality expressing himself succinctly and in a polished style ('úsporně avytříbeným stylem').59 Nine years later, literary historian Jiří Kudrnáč included a piece ...
States of Decadence is divided into two bilingual volumes (French / English). Together they contain forty essays (hence the title of our introduction). These are organized in seven sections where essays are grouped in terms of common ...