Literary Architecture: Essays Toward a Tradition: Walter Pater, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Marcel Proust, Henry James"A complex and important book .... a challenging and sophisticated contribution to critical studies of the sister arts. It originates from a thoroughly considered grasp of the imaginative possibilities of the analogy between architecture and literature, and it boldly brings an innovative critical method to bear upon a neglected subject."--Modern Language Quarterly "Fascinating . . [Frank's] main interest does not lie in tracking down and neatly labeling every appearance of significant architecture in these writers' works. What concerns her is that they all seem to find in architecture, rather than in painting or music, the most satisfying and fruitful analogy for literary creation and for the refined consciousness of the literary artist. . . . There is considerable truth in this book."--Pater Newsletter "Frank's bold hypotheses about these works, her striking juxtapositions--including her epigraphs for the many beautiful illustrations in this handsome book--and her sense of the architectural connotations of words and the implications of spatial metaphors all generate many creative insights. The result is an important, pioneering work."--Comparative Literature "As the subtitle admits, it's a venture in the direction of a tradition, and its ideas aren't arrivals but itineraries, not conclusive formulations but alluring possibilities, invitations to extrapolation. Of its very nature such a project is bound to seem teasing and incomplete; yet it justifies itself by provoking thought in those who read it."--Times Literary Supplement "Brilliant. . . The tour is not easy, for it requires patience and concentration, but it is one well worth taking."--Archetype |
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Literary Architecture: Essays Toward a Tradition: Walter Pater, Gerard ... Ellen Eve Frank No preview available - 1983 |
Common terms and phrases
activity aesthetic Albertine ALVIN LANGDON COBURN arch archi architects architectural analogue architectural images architecture and literature art analogue artist associative beauty building Butterfield's cathedral century chapter character church Claude Colleer Abbott Combray concepts consciousness construction critical describe device dwelling essay experience expression fact furniture George Eastman House Gerard Manley Hopkins Gombrich Gothic Gothic architecture Henry James Hopkins's house of fiction Ibid idea inscape inside instance James's John Ruskin language literary architecture literary art London look Marcel Proust material metaphor mind monuments nature Notre-Dame d'Amiens novel objects Oxford palace particular passage past perception perhaps Plate poem poetic poetry preface Quintilian reader recall recherche rhythm Ruskin Saint-Hilaire seems sense sort soul space spatial stone stress structure style suggests tectural temple things thought tion tradition trans ture Vitruvius walls Walter Pater whole words York Edition