In “My heart laid bare” Baudelaire writes about the “Universal Religion” devised for “the alchemists of thought,” “a religion that comes from man, considered as a divine memento.” The idea, as we read in the text, was inspired by the writings of Chateaubriand, De Maistre and those of the “Alexandrians”. And indeed, the two former authors wrote explicitly about a „universal tradition” that finds its fulfillment in the Catholic religion. It does not matter if we recognize the “Alexandrians” as representatives of the Neoplatonic school, the Alexandrian Fathers of Church, or disciples of Hermetism, the very term implies a tradition of both syncretic and mystic character that resembles gnosis. Baudelaire’s “Universal Religion,” despite his Catho...
The loves of Psyche and Cupid by La Fontaine is a romance of mixed genres, combining the features of...
This paper examines the way in which Marivaux, in The Life of Marianne, plays at “making it true” by...
Florimont, by Aimon de Varennes, a 12th-century Lyonnais author, seems to have been written in 1188,...
In “My heart laid bare” Baudelaire writes about the “Universal Religion” devised for “the alchemists...
In the late 19th century a reversal of the values linked to the sacred and the profane can be observ...
The literature of the Romantics, in the first part of the 19th century, is steeped in religious doub...
Georges Bataille and Hubert Aquin both explore a mystical experience displaying strong similarities,...
As a substitute father figure, a mentor, a tutor and a writer to be admired and imitated, Barbey d’A...
At the beginning of The Man and the Sacred (1939) Roger Caillois affirmed that “every religious conc...
This article is a inquiry about how Barrès (1862-1923) handles the religious rite of pilgrimage. Bar...
Even the form of Henri Chateau’s novel, published in 1901, emphasizes the relationship between a mas...
At its peak in the 17th century, Vanity, thanks to its codification, persists beyond that age favour...
The compartment in A Change of Heart is a secular space. However, the Sacred will gradually invade i...
The paper discusses the relationship between Marcel Proust and Jean Cocteau in connection with the p...
Transforming reality into traces of what once was, Barbey d’Aurevilly’s novels create a world of ves...
The loves of Psyche and Cupid by La Fontaine is a romance of mixed genres, combining the features of...
This paper examines the way in which Marivaux, in The Life of Marianne, plays at “making it true” by...
Florimont, by Aimon de Varennes, a 12th-century Lyonnais author, seems to have been written in 1188,...
In “My heart laid bare” Baudelaire writes about the “Universal Religion” devised for “the alchemists...
In the late 19th century a reversal of the values linked to the sacred and the profane can be observ...
The literature of the Romantics, in the first part of the 19th century, is steeped in religious doub...
Georges Bataille and Hubert Aquin both explore a mystical experience displaying strong similarities,...
As a substitute father figure, a mentor, a tutor and a writer to be admired and imitated, Barbey d’A...
At the beginning of The Man and the Sacred (1939) Roger Caillois affirmed that “every religious conc...
This article is a inquiry about how Barrès (1862-1923) handles the religious rite of pilgrimage. Bar...
Even the form of Henri Chateau’s novel, published in 1901, emphasizes the relationship between a mas...
At its peak in the 17th century, Vanity, thanks to its codification, persists beyond that age favour...
The compartment in A Change of Heart is a secular space. However, the Sacred will gradually invade i...
The paper discusses the relationship between Marcel Proust and Jean Cocteau in connection with the p...
Transforming reality into traces of what once was, Barbey d’Aurevilly’s novels create a world of ves...
The loves of Psyche and Cupid by La Fontaine is a romance of mixed genres, combining the features of...
This paper examines the way in which Marivaux, in The Life of Marianne, plays at “making it true” by...
Florimont, by Aimon de Varennes, a 12th-century Lyonnais author, seems to have been written in 1188,...