Orlando looking at Jaque's reverberated image: "Which I take
to be either a fool or a cipher" ( As You Like It III.ii 279).
Melancholia posits the intersection of the biological and the symbolic,
ambivalently motivating and undermining the imaginary (viz. for example,
Kristeva's "On the melancholic imaginary "). That reverberates
across history in assessments of loss, mourning and absence. "Acedia,"
the radical melancholy of the Egyptian monks of early Christianity,
the "noontime demon" of sloth, entails the temptation of
demonic thoughts and the proliferation of images, an otiose, immobilised
hankering. Their chiaroscuro deserts are the spiritual landscape of
the Promethean myths of transgressive fantasies of knowledge. The
melancholy utopia of Burton, under the mask of mad Democritus, pits
the meditative individual against repressive society. Melancholy has
been either a foreboding of the tragic human condition or a lucid
self-analysis. Historically, solipsistic melancholia may mark the
elegiac transformation of meditation as transitive upon the epic dimension
of the actual world (the Homeric "home") to its modern,
self-constitutive power as "Trauerspiel." With Kierkegaard,
"acedia" becomes "tristitia," a despair grown
self-conscious between sin and passion: the solitary misanthropists
or the scornful elect. Looking both towards medieval times and to
the Renaissance, Dürer's figure is linked to sloth and to geometry,
a blasphemous picture of the creative artist anticipating Blake and/or
Romantic irony. Both the early modern and the post-modern periods
entertain a peculiarly intimate relationship with melancholy because
they are two moments of the history of ideas when "A New Philosophy
calls all in doubt." Deconstruction is a questioning of the metaphysical
value on which Western humanism has been grounded, from the Reformation
on and through the Enlightenment. A symptom of the periodic angst
and restlessness of the Western subject when confronted with the necessity
to redefine itself in the world, literary melancholy has various avatars
that come to the fore at times of existential crisis, from Renaissance
man's Faustian sprezzatura to Romantic agony, post-modern pastiche
and openness. Papers can run the gamut of those various aspects and
others, to try and specify melancholy as against other modes of discourses.
Bibliographical Notes
Burton, Richard. The Anatomy of Melancholy. 1621.
Kristeva, Julia. Soleil Noir. Paris : Gallimard, Folio, 1989.
Larue, Anne. L'autre mélancolie : Acedia, ou les chambres de
l'esprit. Paris: Hermann, 2001.
Masson, Jean-Yves, ed. Faust ou la mélancolie du savoir. Paris
:Desjonquères, 2003.
Radden, Jennifer (ed). The Nature of Melancholy: From Aristotle to
Kristeva.Oxford University Press, 2002.
Starobinski, Jean. La Mélancolie au miroir. Paris : Julliard,
1997.
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