Conversations with Eckermann (entry for 31 January 1827)
“The mania for self-observation and self-admiration in literature and the view that a work is the more true and the more convincing, the more directly the author reveals himself in it, are part of the intellectual inheritance of Rousseau. In the next hundred to hundred and fifty years everything of importance in European literature is stamped with this subjectivism. Not only Werther, René, Obermann, Adolphe, Jacopo Ortis, are among the successors of Saint-Preux, but also the heroes in later novels— from Balzac’s Lucien de Rubempré, Stendhal’s Julien Sorel, Flaubert’s Frédéric Moreau and Emma Bovary to Tolstoy’s Pierre, Proust’s Marcel and Thomas Mann’s Hans Castorp—are derived from it. They all suffer from the discrepancy between dream and reality and are the victim of the conflict between their illusions and practical, commonplace, middle-class life.”
Source: The Social History of Art, Volume III. Rococo, Classicism and Romanticism, 1999, Chapter 2. The New Reading Public
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Arnold Hauser 34
Hungarian art historian 1892–1978Related quotes
Source: Real Presences (1989), I: A Secondary City, Ch. 4 (p. 11).
The End of State http://www.gov.am/files/docs/217.pdf
2008
Lila (1991)
Context: Between the subject and the object lies the value. This Value is more immediate, more directly sensed than any 'self' or any 'object' to which it may be later assigned. It is more real than the stove. Whether the stove is the cause of the low quality or whether possibly something else is the cause is not yet absolutely certain. But that the quality is low is absolutely certain. It is the primary empirical reality from which such things as stoves and heat and oaths and self are later intellectually constructed.
"Quotes", The Educated Imagination (1963), Talk 3: Giants in Time
Context: In literature you don't just read one poem or novel after another, but enter into a complete world of which every work of literature forms part. This affects the writer as much as it does the reader.
Canto I, line 1277
Source: Hudibras, Part III (1678)
“In the self-important, Falco reflected, there is always room for a little more self-importance.”
Source: The Eye of the Heron (1978), Chapter 5 (p. 66)
Source: The Boy Crisis (2018), pp. 97
Source: Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson (1990), p. 34