1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910585556903321

Autore

Subialka Michael J.

Titolo

Modernist Idealism : Ambivalent Legacies of German Philosophy in Italian Literature / / Michael J. Subialka

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Toronto : , : University of Toronto Press, , [2022]

©2021

ISBN

1-4875-4538-X

1-4875-2867-1

Descrizione fisica

1 electronic resource (400 pages)

Collana

Toronto Italian Studies.

Disciplina

850.9/007

Soggetti

Literature: history & criticism

Criticism, interpretation, etc.

Italy

Italy Intellectual life

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Modernist Idealism Revitalizing Italy -- 1 Italy at the Banquet of Nations: Hegel in Politics and Philosophy -- 2 Italy's Modernist Idealism and the Artistic Reception of Schopenhauer -- 3 Aesthetic Decadence and Modernist Idealism: Schopenhauer's Literary-Artistic Legacy -- 4 Avant-Garde Idealism: The Ambivalence of Futurist Vitalism -- 5 Occult Spiritualism and Modernist Idealism: Reanimating the Dead World -- 6 Cinematic Idealism: Modernist Visions of Spiritual Vitality Mediated by the Machine -- Conclusion: Overdetermined Idealist Legacies -- Appendix. Schopenhauer and Leopardi: A Dialogue between A and D -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Index

Sommario/riassunto

Offering a new approach to the intersection of literature and philosophy, Modernist Idealism contends that certain models of idealist thought require artistic form for their full development and that modernism realizes philosophical idealism in aesthetic form. This comparative view of modernism employs tools from intellectual history, literary analysis, and philosophical critique, focusing on the Italian reception of German idealist thought from the mid-1800s to the



Second World War. Modernist Idealism intervenes in ongoing debates about the nineteenth- and twentieth-century resurgence of materialism and spiritualism, as well as the relation of decadent, avant-garde, and modernist production. Michael J. Subialka aims to open new discursive space for the philosophical study of modernist literary and visual culture, considering not only philosophical and literary texts but also early cinema. The author's main contention is that, in various media and with sometimes radically different political and cultural aims, a host of modernist artists and thinkers can be seen as sharing in a project to realize idealist philosophical worldviews in aesthetic form.