Aesthetic Dilemmas

Encounters with Art in Hugo von Hofmannsthal's Literary Modernism

By Marlo Alexandra Burks
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Philosophy, Literary Criticism, Art & Performance Studies, Performance Arts (theatre, Dance & Music)
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780228016656, 296 pages, June 2023
Ebook (PDF) : 9780228017950, June 2023
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780228017967, 296 pages, June 2023

A re-assessment of Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s contributions to the debate on ethics and art.

Description

Hugo von Hofmannsthal (1874–1929) is frequently portrayed in cultural histories as an aloof writer with a precious style, out of step with modern sensibilities. In Aesthetic Dilemmas Marlo Burks reassesses Hofmannsthal’s oeuvre and its place in twentieth-century European modernist aesthetics.

Through an examination of a diverse range of Hofmannsthal’s ekphrastic writings – including poetry, essays, opera libretti, fiction, and letters – Burks argues that Hofmannsthal’s work aims to engage the consciousness and sensibility of readers, listeners, and viewers by way of dynamic encounters with works of art. Aesthetic Dilemmas thereby corrects a long-standing, flawed characterization of Hofmannsthal’s work as escapist and demonstrates how his place in the Modernist movement has been misunderstood in most scholarship. The book is in dialogue with a broad range of critical voices and treats a variety of themes, from aestheticism to money, interpersonal relationships, suffering, poverty, labour, futurity, legacy, and hope.

Translating numerous passages into English for the first time, Aesthetic Dilemmas gives English-speaking readers the chance to evaluate Hofmannsthal’s literary merit and his contributions to the enduring conversation about art’s relation to ethics.

Reviews

“Clear, sensible, effective, and persuasive. Burks is exceptionally skilled in her readings of Hofmannsthal's work, pointing out specific structural and rhetorical features in the texts while simultaneously drawing on wider generalities and theoretical observations to place her sensitive and convincing close readings into a larger literary and cultural context.” Vincent Kling, La Salle University