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Baroque Modernity

An Aesthetics of Theater

Joseph Cermatori

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A groundbreaking study on the vital role of baroque theater in shaping modernist philosophy, literature, and performance.

Finalist for the Outstanding Book Award by the Association for Theatre in Higher Education, Honorable Mention for the Balakian Prize by the International Comparative Literature Association, Winner of the Helen Tartar Book Subvention Award by the American Comparative Literature Association, Finalist of the MSA First Book Prize by the Modernist Studies Association

Baroque style—with its emphasis on ostentation, adornment, and spectacle—might seem incompatible with the dominant...

A groundbreaking study on the vital role of baroque theater in shaping modernist philosophy, literature, and performance.

Finalist for the Outstanding Book Award by the Association for Theatre in Higher Education, Honorable Mention for the Balakian Prize by the International Comparative Literature Association, Winner of the Helen Tartar Book Subvention Award by the American Comparative Literature Association, Finalist of the MSA First Book Prize by the Modernist Studies Association

Baroque style—with its emphasis on ostentation, adornment, and spectacle—might seem incompatible with the dominant forms of art since the Industrial Revolution, but between 1875 and 1935, European and American modernists connected to the theater became fascinated with it. In Baroque Modernity, Joseph Cermatori argues that the memory of seventeenth-century baroque stages helped produce new forms of theater, space, and experience around the turn of the twentieth century. In response, modern theater helped give rise to the development of the baroque as a modern philosophical idea.

The book focuses on avant-gardists whose writing takes place between theory and performance: philosophical theater-makers and theatrical philosophers including Friedrich Nietzsche, Stéphane Mallarmé, Walter Benjamin, and Gertrude Stein. Moving between page and stage, this study tracks the remnants of seventeenth-century theater through modernist aesthetics across an array of otherwise disparate materials, including modern opera, Bertolt Brecht's Epic Theater, poetic tragedies, and miracle plays. By reexamining the twentieth century's engagements with Gianlorenzo Bernini, William Shakespeare, Claudio Monteverdi, Calderón de la Barca, and other seventeenth-century predecessors, the book delineates an enduring tradition of baroque performance. Along the way, Cermatori expands our familiar narratives of "the modern" and traces a history of theatricality that reverberates into the twenty-first century.

Baroque Modernity will appeal to readers in a wide array of disciplines, including comparative literature, theater and performance, art and music history, intellectual history, and aesthetic theory.

Reviews

Reviews

Highly intelligent, lucid, and elegantly wrought, Baroque Modernity enlivens the history it describes and speaks to epistemological concerns. Cermatori has a good eye and ear for the languages of the stage, amply demonstrated in his discussion of baroquely modernist spectacle, a counter-Wagnerian take on total theater.

Cermatori's book has the advantage of proceeding from a fact that is both readily acknowledged and traditionally undertheorized: that the quality of being 'baroque' still exerts tremendous conceptual thrall over the aesthetic production of modernity. Baroque Modernity is a deeply necessary and timely intervention—a genuine tour de force.

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Book Details

Table of Contents

Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
On "Baroque"
Introduction: Toward an Orphic Modernism
Chapter 1. Overcoming Ascetic Style: Nietzsche and the Transvaluation of the Baroque
Chapter 2. The Matter of

Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
On "Baroque"
Introduction: Toward an Orphic Modernism
Chapter 1. Overcoming Ascetic Style: Nietzsche and the Transvaluation of the Baroque
Chapter 2. The Matter of Spectacle: Mallarmé and the Futures of Theatrical Ostentation
Chapter 3. Landscapes of Melancholy: Benjamin, Trauerspiel, and the Pathways of Tradition
Chapter 4. The Citability of Baroque Gesture: Unsettling Stein
Epilogue: Glancing Back, Reaching Forward
Note on Translations
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Author Bio