Abstract

Sunt enim quidam, quibus morbi vitio mei amarum videatur- Seneca, Epistles. . . je ris dans les deuils et pleure dans les fetes, Et trouve un gout suave au vin le plus amer . . .-Baudelaire, Voix (The Voice) (1866)La matin, bien sur, j'avais dans la bouche le gout amer de la condition mortelle.-Albert Camus, La Chute The Fall) (1956)This essay applies Kantian concepts and the framework of Kantian philosophy to a body of literature that most people would consider distinctly un-Kantian - indeed anti-Kantian - but that I will try to define in terms of Immanuel Kant's theory. The body of literature to which I refer is a mode of satire that is deliberately unpleasant and self-consciously bitter. In particular, I will reconsider Shakespeare's place in the history of early modern aesthetics by examining the role that Troilus and Cressida plays in this tradition of aesthetically bitter satire, a tradition that perhaps culminates in Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground (1864). Along the lines of recent scholarship called variously Historical Formalism or New Aestheticism, I will address simultaneously the theoretical concerns of Kant's philosophy and the empirical concerns of literary history.1 The point of convergence is my notion of uncommon sense.Of course, the term common sense has been associated with artistic taste for centuries.2 Its definitive philosophical articulation is given in the Critique of Judgement, where Kant posits an aesthetic common sense as the a priori ground of oftaste because such judgments presuppose that the pleasure in beauty is universally valid and communicable.3 While Kant thus maps out a grand empire of taste ruled by common sense, he leaves unexplored much of the gustatory territory that lies within the realm of the whose vast expanses of wilderness contain the area of bitter experience that I suggest belongs to uncommon sense, or more specifically the satirical sublime. This area is uncovered in Notes from Underground, a work that reveals both how such bitterness seems anti-Kantian and also how it nevertheless implies a paradoxical, masochistic form of pleasure that partakes of the Kantian sublime. Thus, I will argue that the term uncommon sense defines the powerful appeal that bitterness exerts in the literary mode of the satirical a mode in which Dostoevsky is a late great virtuoso and of which Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida is a prime early modern example.IDespite dismissing Kantian values by ridiculing the beautiful and sublime, Notes from Underground asserts that there is a valuable form of pleasure in the conscious experience of displeasure, which is precisely the structure of Kant's sublime. For instance, in part 1 Dostoevsky 's narrator, the Underground Man, appeals to readers in an agonized crescendo that reveals his ultimate motive for addressing them in the first place:Tell me this: why was it, . . . at the precise moment that I was most capable of becoming conscious of the subtleties of everything that was beautiful and sublime, as we used to say at one time, that I didn't become conscious, and instead did such unseemly things. . . ? The more conscious I was of what was good, of everything beautiful and sublime, the more deeply I sank into the morass. ... I didn't believe that others were experiencing the same thing; therefore, I kept it a secret. ... I used to gnaw and gnaw at myself inwardly, secretly . . . until finally the bitterness turned into some kind of shameful, accursed sweetness and at last into genuine, earnest pleasure! Yes, into pleasure, real pleasure! I absolutely mean that. . . . That's why I first began to speak out, because I want to know for certain whether other people share this same pleasure.4This aria on the intermingling of pain and pleasure is formulated in terms of sweetness and bitterness. …

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.