Bovarysme reloaded: the case of Greece
Sophie Evangelos Iakovidou
Докладчик
преподаватель
Democritus University of Thrace (GREECE)
Democritus University of Thrace (GREECE)
Греческий институт
2019-03-20
15:55 -
16:20
Ключевые слова, аннотация
Bovarysme, Modern Greek Literature, literary canon, cultural studies.
Тезисы
Despite the increasing interest for a notion that turned out to be not
only a literary but a wider cultural phenomenon worldwide, Greece has long
remained an unchartered territory. Greek
literature though and Modern Greek intellectuals in general couldn’t remain
indifferent for something that shortly after its first «declaration» at the
beginning of the 20th century by French philosopher Gilles de Gautier,
who has coined the term after G. Flaubert’s famous heroine, gained rapidly
momentum. Defined by Gautier as «the will to imagine oneself other than (s)he
is», bovarysme depicted the inherent tendency to create an imagined or
unrealistic conception of oneself, following Emma’s own predisposition — and
the resulting sense of continuous unfulfillment — due to an
abuse of reading romantic fiction. Modern Greek novelists didn’t fail to grasp
the notion’s potential in terms of social psychology and literary
characterology. They offered a whole array of different representations, using
them as a spectre in order to comprehend and comment on society’s recurrent
derailments and misconceptions. I will trace an outline of bovarysme’s presence
as a leitmotiv in the works of major as well as minor Μodern Greek
authors during the twentieth century, which will prove quite revealing not only
of the struggles for symbolic power within the Greek literary field but also of
the cultural and political tendencies and variations it led to before and after
the Second World War.