Cours de poétique: Le langage, la société, l'histoire (1940-1945) (2)
by Paul Valéry
On This Page
Description
"Paul Valéry occupa de 1937 à sa mort en 1945 la chaire de Poétique créée pour lui au Collège de France. Connu jusquà présent par de rares témoignages dauditeurs, cet enseignement a pris dans lhistoire de la critique littéraire la dimension dun mythe. Sous le nom de poétique, lécrivain élabore en effet pour la première fois la synthèse du "Système" total de lacte créateur dont il rêvait depuis sa jeunesse. Son originalité : situer la genèse de luvre littéraire et show more artistique non seulement dans lordre de la création individuelle, mais également dans un vaste horizon social. Véritable laboratoire de pensée, ce cours expérimental contient en germe une psychologie de la création, une sociologie de lart et une esthétique de la réception, tout en croisant les interrogations actuelles de la phénoménologie, de la philosophie du langage et des neurosciences. Avec une curiosité sans limites, cet essai dune anthropologie de la vie de lesprit se révèle un monument de la pensée du XXe siècle. Dans ce premier tome, qui couvre les trois premières années du cours, Valéry insiste sur le rôle fondamental que jouent le corps et lesprit dans la poétique, entendue de façon large comme étude de tous les processus de création. Rien néchappe à lanalyse : les illusions de la philosophie sont dénoncées, lutilité de lart questionnée, lexistence psychique mise à nu. Lentrée dans la Seconde Guerre mondiale donne lieu à des réflexions bouleversantes sur lavenir de lEurope et des intellectuels."--Page 4 of cover. show lessTags
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information

388+ Works 3,686 Members
Harry T. Moore has written in Twentieth Century French Literature to World War II: "Paul Valery, who published his most important verse between 1917 and 1922, is the greatest French poet the twentieth century has so far produced... .Few modern poets.. .have presented richer experience through their verses. Valery.. .could handle abstractions with show more a living and always poetic concreteness, and put them into comparable verse-music." He was also a critic and aesthetic theorist, interested in art, architecture, and mathematics. His skepticism, malice, and learning brought him both admiration and hostility. Valery had been a member of the Mallarme circle in the 1890s and wrote much symbolist poetry at that time, but an unhappy love affair caused him to fall poetically silent (he earned his living as a journalist) until Gide and others persuaded him, 20 years later, to publish some of his youthful work. He had thought to add a short new poem and instead wrote La Jeune Parque (The Young Fate) (1917), several hundred lines in length. It won him instant recognition in poetic circles. Several collections of his earlier poems were published in the 1920s, as well as the great Cimetiere Marin (Graveyard by the Sea), a powerful meditation on time and mortality. From then until his death in 1945, he wrote chiefly aesthetic theory, criticism, and an unfinished play about Faust. He helped to revive lively interest in the symbolists and had a pervading influence on French culture generally, though his poetry is not easy for the casual reader. His criticism and aesthetic theory had an important influence on the structuralist critics of the 1960s. He was elected to the French Academy in 1925. His Collected Works (1971--75) have been published in expert translations by the Bollingen Foundation. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 8
- Popularity
- 2,501,157
- Languages
- French
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 1



