DESCRIPTION AS SELF-REFLECTION IN ZSIGMOND JUSTH’S MÛVÉSZ SZERELEM Cover Image
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DESCRIPTION AS SELF-REFLECTION IN ZSIGMOND JUSTH’S MÛVÉSZ SZERELEM
DESCRIPTION AS SELF-REFLECTION IN ZSIGMOND JUSTH’S MÛVÉSZ SZERELEM

Author(s): VIKTÓRIA DIAN
Subject(s): Cultural history, Hungarian Literature, 19th Century, Theory of Literature
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: Hungarian literature; nineteenth-century novel; Zsigmond Justh; self-reflection; description; mise en abyme; focalization;

Summary/Abstract: This paper focuses on a forgotten Hungarian author's forgotten novel. Zsigmond Justh's Mûvész szerelem [Artist's Love] was published in 1888 and considered to be a “styleroman”, because a number of artistic styles meet in the landscapes it depicts, involving the basic changes in literature from realism to imressionism, Art Nouveau, symbolism, and naturalism. This study examines these descriptive parts of the novel because they provide a peculiar type of self-reflection. The analysis starts with the description of a character's appearence which can be conceived as a narrative representation of portraiture. Then two narrated landscapes reflecting on their own compositions are examined. The aim of the paper is to establish that most of the descriptive parts have the same function in the novel: they denaturalize the spectacle, representing a created visual structure which refers to the text itself, and builts on a narrative mechanism disavowing the realistic illusion. Finally, the analysis concludes that description can be regarded as mise en abyme in the novel because the descriptive parts illustrate the priority of the artist's subjectivity in art just as the whole novel realises this aesthetical idea as well.

  • Issue Year: 19/2005
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 277-294
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English